Targeting the Cell Stress Response of Plasmodium falciparum to Overcome Artemisinin Resistance

Con Dogovski(University of Melbourne), Stanley C. Xie(ARC Centre of Excellence for Coherent X-ray Science), Gaétan Burgio(Australian National University), Jessica L. Bridgford(ARC Centre of Excellence for Coherent X-ray Science), Sachel Mok(Nanyang Technological University), James M. McCaw(University of Melbourne), Kesinee Chotivanich(Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit), Shannon Kenny(ARC Centre of Excellence for Coherent X-ray Science), Nina F. Gnädig(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Judith Straimer(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Zbynek Bozdech(Nanyang Technological University), David A. Fidock(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), J. A. Simpson(University of Melbourne), Arjen M. Dondorp(Mahidol University), Simon J. Foote(Australian National University), Nectarios Klonis(ARC Centre of Excellence for Coherent X-ray Science), Leann Tilley(University of Melbourne)
PLoS Biology
April 22, 2015
Cited by 341Open Access
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Abstract

Successful control of falciparum malaria depends greatly on treatment with artemisinin combination therapies. Thus, reports that resistance to artemisinins (ARTs) has emerged, and that the prevalence of this resistance is increasing, are alarming. ART resistance has recently been linked to mutations in the K13 propeller protein. We undertook a detailed kinetic analysis of the drug responses of K13 wild-type and mutant isolates of Plasmodium falciparum sourced from a region in Cambodia (Pailin). We demonstrate that ART treatment induces growth retardation and an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, indicative of a cellular stress response that engages the ubiquitin/proteasome system. We show that resistant parasites exhibit lower levels of ubiquitinated proteins and delayed onset of cell death, indicating an enhanced cell stress response. We found that the stress response can be targeted by inhibiting the proteasome. Accordingly, clinically used proteasome inhibitors strongly synergize ART activity against both sensitive and resistant parasites, including isogenic lines expressing mutant or wild-type K13. Synergy is also observed against Plasmodium berghei in vivo. We developed a detailed model of parasite responses that enables us to infer, for the first time, in vivo parasite clearance profiles from in vitro assessments of ART sensitivity. We provide evidence that the clinical marker of resistance (delayed parasite clearance) is an indirect measure of drug efficacy because of the persistence of unviable parasites with unchanged morphology in the circulation, and we suggest alternative approaches for the direct measurement of viability. Our model predicts that extending


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