Genetic validation of PfFKBP35 as an antimalarial drug target
Plasmodium falciparum accounts for the majority of over 600,000 malaria-associated deaths annually. Parasites resistant to nearly all antimalarials have emerged and the need for drugs with alternative modes of action is thus undoubted. The FK506-binding protein PfFKBP35 has gained attention as a...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2024
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174044 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Plasmodium falciparum accounts for the majority of over 600,000 malaria-associated
deaths annually. Parasites resistant to nearly all antimalarials have emerged and the need for drugs
with alternative modes of action is thus undoubted. The FK506-binding protein PfFKBP35 has
gained attention as a promising drug target due to its high affinity to the macrolide compound
FK506 (tacrolimus). Whilst there is considerable interest in targeting PfFKBP35 with small molecules,
a genetic validation of this factor as a drug target is missing and its function in parasite biology
remains elusive. Here, we show that limiting PfFKBP35 levels are lethal to P. falciparum and result in
a delayed death-like phenotype that is characterized by defective ribosome homeostasis and stalled
protein synthesis. Our data furthermore suggest that FK506, unlike the action of this drug in model
organisms, exerts its antiproliferative activity in a PfFKBP35-independent manner and, using cellular
thermal shift assays, we identify putative FK506-targets beyond PfFKBP35. In addition to revealing
first insights into the function of PfFKBP35, our results show that FKBP-binding drugs can adopt
non-canonical modes of action – with major implications for the development of FK506-derived
molecules active against Plasmodium parasites and other eukaryotic pathogens. |
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