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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Despite decades of research,
malaria
remains the world's most deadly parasitic disease. New treatments with novel mechanisms of action are urgently needed. Plasmepsin II is an aspartyl protease that has been validated as an antimalarial therapeutic target enzyme. Although natural products form the basis of most modern antimalarial drugs, no systematic high-throughput screening has been reported against this target. We have designed an effective strategy for carrying out high-throughput screening of an extensive library of natural products that uses a fluorescence resonance energy transfer primary screening assay in tandem with a fluorescence polarization assay. This strategy allows rapid screening of the library coupled with effective discrimination and elimination of false-positive samples and selection of true hits for chemical isolation of inhibitors of
plasmepsin II
.
...
PMID:Development of a plasmepsin II fluorescence polarization assay suitable for high throughput antimalarial drug discovery. 1223 Aug 91
Malaria
remains a human disease of global significance and a major cause of high infant mortality in endemic nations. Parasites of the genus Plasmodium cause the disease by degrading human hemoglobin as a source of amino acids for their growth and maturation. Hemoglobin degradation is initiated by aspartic proteases, termed plasmepsins, with a cleavage at the alpha-chain between residues Phe33 and Leu34. Plasmepsin II is one of the four catalytically active plasmepsins that has been identified in the food vacuole of Plasmodium falciparum. Novel crystal structures of uncomplexed
plasmepsin II
as well as the complex with a potent inhibitor have been refined with data extending to resolution limits of 1.9A and 2.7A, and to R factors of 17% and 18%, respectively. The inhibitor, N-(3-[(2-benzo[1,3]dioxol-5-yl-ethyl)[3-(1-methyl-3-oxo-1,3-dihydro-isoindol-2-yl)-propionyl]-amino]-1-benzyl-2-(hydroxypropyl)-4-benzyloxy-3,5-dimethoxy-benzamide, belongs to a family of potent non-peptidic inhibitors that have large P1' groups. Such inhibitors could not be modeled into the binding cavity of the structure of
plasmepsin II
in complex with pepstatin A. Our structures reveal that the binding cavities of the new complex and uncomplexed
plasmepsin II
are considerably more open than that of the pepstatin A complex, allowing for larger heterocyclic groups in the P1', P2' and P2 positions. Both complexed and uncomplexed
plasmepsin II
crystallized in space group P2, with one monomer in the asymmetric unit. The structures show extensive interlocking of monomers around the crystallographic axis of symmetry, with areas in excess of 2300A(2) buried at the interface, and a loop of one monomer interacting with the binding cavity of the 2-fold related monomer. Electron density for this loop is only fully ordered in the complexed structure.
...
PMID:Novel uncomplexed and complexed structures of plasmepsin II, an aspartic protease from Plasmodium falciparum. 1261 16
With the aim to develop inhibitors of the plasmepsin I and II aspartic proteases of the
malaria
parasite Plasmodium falciparum, we have synthesized sets of libraries from novel reversed-statine isosteres, using a combination of solution phase and solid phase chemistry. The synthetic strategy furnishes the library compounds in good to high overall yields and with excellent stereochemical control throughout the developed route. The products were evaluated for their plasmepsin I and II inhibiting properties and were found to exhibit modest but promising activity. The best inhibitor exhibits an in vitro activity of 28% inhibition of
plasmepsin II
at an inhibitor concentration of 0.5 microM (K(i) for Plm II=5.4 microM).
...
PMID:Solid-phase library synthesis of reversed-statine type inhibitors of the malarial aspartyl proteases plasmepsin I and II. 1261 68
Malaria
is a very serious infectious disease against which the currently available drugs are loosing effectiveness. The main problem is the emergence and the spreading of resistant parasite strains. New treatments are needed in order to regain control over the disease. Drug discovery efforts towards this goal are likely to be more successful, if they focus towards novel mechanisms of action. Such efforts will result in drugs that are functionally and structurally different from the existing drugs and therefore will overcome existing resistances. Here we focus on the aspartic protease
plasmepsin II
, which is a promising new drug target. We review the drug discovery efforts that were published in the literature on this enzyme, and we present the compounds synthesized at Actelion Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of the Plasmodium falciparum parasite aspartic protease plasmepsin II as potential antimalarial agents. 1267 79
Drug development against viral or microbial targets is often compounded by the existence of naturally occurring polymorphisms or drug resistant mutations. In the case of Plasmodium falciparum, the etiological agent of
malaria
, four related and essential proteases, plasmepsin I, II, and IV and the histo-aspartyl protease (HAP), have been identified in the food vacuole of the parasite. Since all of these enzymes are involved in the hemoglobin degradation of infected victims, the simultaneous inhibition of the four enzymes can be expected to lead to a faster starvation of the parasite and to delay the onset of drug resistance, since four enzymes will need to mutate in a concerted fashion. This study describes the design of an adaptive inhibitor intended to inhibit the entire plasmepsin family. Adaptive inhibitors bind with extremely high affinity to a primary target within the family and maintain significant affinity against the remaining members. This objective is accomplished by engineering the strongest and most specific interactions of the inhibitor against conserved regions of the binding site and by accommodating target variations by means of flexible asymmetric functional groups. Using this approach, we have designed an inhibitor with subnanomolar affinity (0.5 nM) against the primary target,
plasmepsin II
, and with no loss or a very small loss of affinity against plasmepsin IV, I, and HAP (K(i) ratios of 0.4, 7.1, and 17.7, respectively). The core of the inhibitor is defined by an allophenylnorstatine scaffold. Adaptability is provided by an asymmetric amino indanol functional group facing one of the key variable regions in the binding site. Adaptive inhibitors, which display high affinity against several variations of a primary target, are expected to play an important role in the chemotherapy of infectious diseases.
...
PMID:High-affinity inhibition of a family of Plasmodium falciparum proteases by a designed adaptive inhibitor. 1285 91
The hemoglobin-degrading aspartic proteases plasmepsin I (Plm I) and
plasmepsin II
(Plm II) of the
malaria
parasite Plasmodium falciparum have lately emerged as putative drug targets. A series of C(2)-symmetric compounds encompassing the 1,2-dihydroxyethylene scaffold and a variety of elongated P1/P1' side chains were synthesized via microwave-assisted palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions. Binding affinity calculations with the linear interaction energy method and molecular dynamics simulations reproduced the experimental binding data obtained in a Plm II assay with very good accuracy. Bioactive conformations of the elongated P1/P1' chains were predicted and agreed essentially with a recent X-ray structure. The compounds exhibited picomolar to nanomolar inhibition constants for the plasmepsins and no measurable affinity to the human enzyme cathepsin D. Some of the compounds also demonstrated significant inhibition of parasite growth in cell culture. To the best of our knowledge, these plasmepsin inhibitors represent the most selective reported to date and constitute promising lead compounds for further optimization.
...
PMID:Potent inhibitors of the Plasmodium falciparum enzymes plasmepsin I and II devoid of cathepsin D inhibitory activity. 1469 25
Aspartic proteases have emerged as targets for substrate-based inhibitor design due to their vital roles in the life cycles of the organisms that cause AIDS,
malaria
, leukemia, and other infectious diseases. Based on the concept of mimicking the substrate transition-state, we designed and synthesized a novel class of aspartic protease inhibitors containing the hydroxymethylcarbonyl (HMC) isostere. An unnatural amino acid, allophenylnorstatine [Apns; (2 S ,3 S )-3-amino-2-hydroxy-4-phenylbutyric acid], was incorporated at the P1 site in a series of peptidomimetic compounds that mimic the natural substrates of the HIV, HTLV-I, and malarial aspartic proteases. From extensive structure-activity relationship studies, we were able to identify a series of highly potent peptidomimetic inhibitors of HIV protease. One highly potent inhibitor of the malarial aspartic protease (
plasmepsin II
) was identified. Finally, a promising lead compound against the HTLV-I protease was identified.
...
PMID:Design of inhibitors against HIV, HTLV-I, and Plasmodium falciparum aspartic proteases. 1557 23
New and potent inhibitors of the malarial aspartic proteases plasmepsin (Plm) I and II, from the deadliest
malaria
parasite Plasmodium falciparum, have been synthesized utilizing Suzuki coupling reactions on previously synthesized bromobenzyloxy-substituted statine-like inhibitors. The enzyme inhibition activity has been improved up to eight times by identifying P1 substituents that effectively bind to the continuous S1-S3 crevice of Plasmepsin I and II. By replacement of the bromo atom in the P1 p-bromobenzyloxy-substituted inhibitors with different aryl substituents, several inhibitors exhibiting K(i) values in the low nanomolar range for both Plm I and II have been identified. Some of these inhibitors are also effective in attenuating parasite growth in red blood cells, with the best inhibitors, compounds 2 and 4, displaying 70% and 83% inhibition, respectively, at a concentration of 5 microM. The design was partially guided by the X-ray crystal structure disclosed herein of the previously synthesized inhibitor 1 in complex with
plasmepsin II
.
...
PMID:Design and synthesis of potent inhibitors of plasmepsin I and II: X-ray crystal structure of inhibitor in complex with plasmepsin II. 1597 92
Aspartic proteases play key roles in the biology of
malaria
parasites and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We tested the activity of seven HIV-1 protease inhibitors against cultured Plasmodium falciparum. All compounds inhibited the development of parasites at pharmacologically relevant concentrations. The most potent compound, lopinavir, was active against parasites (50% inhibitory concentration [IC50], 0.9 to 2.1 microM) at concentrations well below those achieved by ritonavir-boosted lopinavir therapy. Lopinavir also inhibited the P. falciparum aspartic protease
plasmepsin II
at a similar concentration (IC50, 2.7 microM). These findings suggest that use of HIV-1 protease inhibitors may offer clinically relevant antimalarial activity.
...
PMID:Antimalarial activity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease inhibitors. 1598 Mar 79
Aspartic proteases are receiving considerable attention as potential drug targets in several serious diseases, such as AIDS,
malaria
, and Alzheimer's disease. These enzymes cleave polypeptide chains, often between specific amino acid residues, but despite the common reaction mechanism, they exhibit large structural differences. Here, the catalytic mechanism of aspartic proteases
plasmepsin II
, cathepsin D, and HIV-1 protease is examined by computer simulations utilizing the empirical valence bond approach in combination with molecular dynamics and free energy perturbation calculations. Free energy profiles are established for four different substrates, each six amino acids long and containing hydrophobic side chains in the P1 and P1' positions. Our simulations reproduce the catalytic effect of these enzymes, which accelerate the reaction rate by a factor of approximately 10(10) compared to that of the corresponding uncatalyzed reaction in water. The calculations elucidate the origin of the catalytic effect and allow a rationalization of the fact that, despite large structural differences between
plasmepsin II
/cathepsin D and HIV-1 protease, the magnitude of their rate enhancement is very similar. Amino acid residues surrounding the active site together with structurally conserved water molecules are found to play an important role in catalysis, mainly through dipolar (electrostatic) stabilization. A linear free energy relationship for the reactions in the different enzymes is established that also demonstrates the reduced reorganization energy in the enzymes compared to that in the uncatalyzed water reaction.
...
PMID:Catalysis and linear free energy relationships in aspartic proteases. 1678 22
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