Designed Parasite-Selective Rhomboid Inhibitors Block Invasion and Clear Blood-Stage Malaria.
Cell Chem Biol
; 27(11): 1410-1424.e6, 2020 11 19.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32888502
Rhomboid intramembrane proteases regulate pathophysiological processes, but their targeting in a disease context has never been achieved. We decoded the atypical substrate specificity of malaria rhomboid PfROM4, but found, unexpectedly, that it results from "steric exclusion": PfROM4 and canonical rhomboid proteases cannot cleave each other's substrates due to reciprocal juxtamembrane steric clashes. Instead, we engineered an optimal sequence that enhanced proteolysis >10-fold, and solved high-resolution structures to discover that boronates enhance inhibition >100-fold. A peptide boronate modeled on our "super-substrate" carrying one "steric-excluding" residue inhibited PfROM4 but not human rhomboid proteolysis. We further screened a library to discover an orthogonal alpha-ketoamide that potently inhibited PfROM4 but not human rhomboid proteolysis. Despite the membrane-immersed target and rapid invasion, ultrastructural analysis revealed that single-dosing blood-stage malaria cultures blocked host-cell invasion and cleared parasitemia. These observations establish a strategy for designing parasite-selective rhomboid inhibitors and expose a druggable dependence on rhomboid proteolysis in non-motile parasites.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Protease Inhibitors
/
Drug Design
/
Protozoan Proteins
/
Amides
/
Malaria
/
Antimalarials
Limits:
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Cell Chem Biol
Year:
2020
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Country of publication: