Enhancing the Intrinsic Antiplasmodial Activity and Improving the Stability and Selectivity of a Tunable Peptide Scaffold Derived from Human Platelet Factor 4
Journal Title
ACS Infectious Diseases
Publication Type
Research article
Abstract
The control of malaria, a disease caused by Plasmodium parasites that kills over half a million people every year, is threatened by the continual emergence and spread of drug resistance. Therefore, new molecules with different mechanisms of action are needed in the antimalarial drug development pipeline. Peptides developed from host defense molecules are gaining traction as anti-infectives due to theood of inducing drug resistance. Human platelet factor 4 (PF4) has intrinsic activity against P. falciparum, and a macrocyclic helix-loop-helix peptide derived from its active domain recapitulates this activity. In this study, we used a stepwise approach to optimize first-generation PF4-derived internalization peptides (PDIPs) by producing analogues with substitutions to charged and hydrophobic amino acid residues or with modifications to terminal residues including backbone cyclization. We evaluated the in vitro activity of PDIP analogues against P. falciparum compared to their overall helical structure, resistance to breakdown by serum proteases, selective binding to negatively charged membranes, and hemolytic activity. Next, we combined antiplasmodial potency-enhancing substitutions that retained favorable membrane and cell-selective properties onto the most stable scaffold to produce a backbone cyclic PDIP analogue with four-fold improved activity against P. falciparum compared to first-generation peptides. These studies demonstrate the ability to modify PDIP to select for and combine desirable properties and further validate the suitability of this unique peptide scaffold for developing a new molecule class that is distinct from existing antimalarial drugs.
Publisher
ACS Publications
Keywords
Plasmodium; drug development; host defense peptide; malaria; rational design; targeted cell-penetration
Department(s)
Cancer Imaging
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsinfecdis.4c00276
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2024-08-29 04:13:50
Last Modified: 2024-08-29 04:22:13

© 2024 The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research. Access to this website is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use

An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙