Abstract
With the inevitable selection of resistance to antimalarial drugs in treated populations, there is a need for new medicines to enter the clinic and new targets to progress through the drug discovery pipeline. In this study we set out to develop a transgenic rodent model for testing inhibitors of the Plasmodium falciparum cyclic GMP-dependent kinase in vivo. A model was needed that would allow us to investigate whether differences in amino acid sequence of this enzyme between species influences in vivo efficacy. Here we report the successful development of a transgenic P. berghei line in which the cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) was replaced by the P. falciparum orthologue. We demonstrate that the P. falciparum orthologue was able to functionally complement the endogenous P. berghei pkg gene throughout blood stage development and early sexual development. However, subsequent development in the mosquito was severely compromised. We show that this is due to a defect in the female lineage of the transgenic by using genetic crosses with both male and female deficient P. berghei lines. This defect could be due to expression of a female-specific target in the mosquito stages of P. berghei that cannot be phosphorylated by the P. falciparum kinase. Using a previously reported anti-coccidial inhibitor of the cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase, we show no difference in in vivo efficacy between the transgenic and control P. berghei lines. This in vivo model will be useful for screening future generations of cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitors and allowing us to overcome any species-specific differences in the enzyme primary sequence that would influence in vivo efficacy in the rodent model. The approach will also be applicable to in vivo testing of other antimalarial compounds where the target is known.
Highlights
IntroductionIn 2012, malaria caused an estimated 627,000 deaths (with an uncertainty range of 473,000 to 789,000), mostly among African children (http://www.who.int)
In 2012, malaria caused an estimated 627,000 deaths, mostly among African children
In the present work we report development of a GFP-expressing transgenic P. berghei line in which the rodent malaria PKG was replaced by the P. falciparum PKG
Summary
In 2012, malaria caused an estimated 627,000 deaths (with an uncertainty range of 473,000 to 789,000), mostly among African children (http://www.who.int). The malaria burden has fallen dramatically in some countries in recent years, likely due to scaling up of interventions such as vector control programmes and the use of artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) as the first line of treatment. It has been firmly established in parts of Southeast Asia that ACT has developed a reduced efficacy in many patients [1,2] likely heralding resistance to this drug which would be a public health disaster in the absence of alternative treatments. Binding of cGMP, dramatically changes the conformation of the enzyme [6] allowing substrate binding and transfer of the cphosphate of ATP to a serine/threonine residue of the bound substrate
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