Abstract

The prokaryotic ATP-dependent ClpP protease, localized in the relict plastid of malaria parasite, represents a potential drug target. In the present study, we utilized in silico structure-based screening and medicinal chemistry approaches to identify a novel pyrimidine series of compounds inhibiting P. falciparum ClpP protease activity and evaluated their antiparasitic activities. Structure-activity relationship indicated that morpholine moiety at C2, an aromatic substitution at N3 and a 4-oxo moiety on the pyrimidine are important for potent inhibition of ClpP enzyme along with antiparasiticidal activity. Compound 33 exhibited potent antiparasitic activity (EC₅₀ 9.0±0.2μM), a 9-fold improvement over the antiparasitic activity of the hit molecule 6. Treatment of blood stage P. falciparum cultures with compound 33 caused morphological and developmental abnormalities in the parasites; further, compound 33 treatment hindered apicoplast development indicating the targeting of apicoplast.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call