Chemical and genetic validation of thiamine utilization as an antimalarial drug target

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Abstract

Thiamine is metabolized into an essential cofactor for several enzymes. Here we show that oxythiamine, a thiamine analog, inhibits proliferation of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum in vitro via a thiamine-related pathway and significantly reduces parasite growth in a mouse malaria model. Overexpression of thiamine pyrophosphokinase (the enzyme that converts thiamine into its active form, thiamine pyrophosphate) hypersensitizes parasites to oxythiamine by up to 1,700-fold, consistent with oxythiamine being a substrate for thiamine pyrophosphokinase and its conversion into an antimetabolite. We show that parasites overexpressing the thiamine pyrophosphate-dependent enzymes oxoglutarate dehy-drogenase and pyruvate dehydrogenase are up to 15-fold more resistant to oxythiamine, consistent with the antimetabolite inactivating thiamine pyrophosphate-dependent enzymes. Our studies therefore validate thiamine utilization as an antimalarial drug target and demonstrate that a single antimalarial can simultaneously target several enzymes located within distinct organelles. & 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Chan, X. W. A., Wrenger, C., Stahl, K., Bergmann, B., Winterberg, M., Müller, I. B., & Saliba, K. J. (2013). Chemical and genetic validation of thiamine utilization as an antimalarial drug target. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3060

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