Subtilisin-like Serine Protease 1 (SUB1) as an Emerging Antimalarial Drug Target: Current Achievements in Inhibitor Discovery
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2022
Elīna Līdumniece, Chrislaine Withers-Martinez, Fiona Hackett, Michael J Blackman, Aigars Jirgensons

Widespread resistance to many antimalarial therapies currently in use stresses the need for the discovery of new classes of drugs with new modes of action. The subtilisin-like serine protease SUB1 controls egress of malaria parasites (merozoites) from the parasite-infected red blood cell. As such, SUB1 is considered a prospective target for drugs designed to interrupt the asexual blood stage life cycle of the malaria parasite. Inhibitors of SUB1 have potential as wide-spectrum antimalarial drugs, as a single orthologue of SUB1 is found in the genomes of all known Plasmodium species. This mini-perspective provides a short overview of the function and structure of SUB1 and summarizes all of the published SUB1 inhibitors. The inhibitors are classified by the methods of their discovery, including both rational design and screening.


Atslēgas vārdi
Malaria Parasite, In-Silico, Plasmodium, Specificity, Boron, Acid
DOI
10.1021/acs.jmedchem.2c01093
Hipersaite
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.2c01093

Līdumniece, E., Withers-Martinez, C., Hackett, F., Blackman, M., Jirgensons, A. Subtilisin-like Serine Protease 1 (SUB1) as an Emerging Antimalarial Drug Target: Current Achievements in Inhibitor Discovery. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2022, Vol. 65, No. 19, 12535.-12545.lpp. ISSN 0022-2623. Pieejams: doi:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.2c01093

Publikācijas valoda
English (en)
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