Molecular Medicine Israel

The anticancer human mTOR inhibitor sapanisertib potently inhibits multiple Plasmodium kinases and life cycle stages

Multistage antimalarial

Malaria is caused by infection with the protozoan parasite Plasmodium spp. and remains a serious global health threat. The emergence of resistance to existing antimalarial drugs highlights a need for treatments that use different mechanisms and target multiple parasite life stages. Arendse et al. show that the human mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor sapanisertib has potent activity against liver and asexual blood stage Plasmodium spp. infection and can block parasite transmission from mosquitos. Sapanisertib is a pyrazolopyrimidine human kinase inhibitor that was initially developed to treat cancer. Chemoproteomic tools and biochemical assays revealed that sapanisertib can inhibit the Plasmodium kinases phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase type III beta (PI4Kβ) and cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG). These results highlight the potential of sapanisertib as a promising antimalarial with multistage activity and the ability to target at least two Plasmodium kinases.

Abstract

Compounds acting on multiple targets are critical to combating antimalarial drug resistance. Here, we report that the human “mammalian target of rapamycin” (mTOR) inhibitor sapanisertib has potent prophylactic liver stage activity, in vitro and in vivo asexual blood stage (ABS) activity, and transmission-blocking activity against the protozoan parasite Plasmodium spp. Chemoproteomics studies revealed multiple potential Plasmodium kinase targets, and potent inhibition of Plasmodium phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase type III beta (PI4Kβ) and cyclic guanosine monophosphate–dependent protein kinase (PKG) was confirmed in vitro. Conditional knockdown of PI4Kβ in ABS cultures modulated parasite sensitivity to sapanisertib, and laboratory-generated P. falciparum sapanisertib resistance was mediated by mutations in PI4Kβ. Parasite metabolomic perturbation profiles associated with sapanisertib and other known PI4Kβ and/or PKG inhibitors revealed similarities and differences between chemotypes, potentially caused by sapanisertib targeting multiple parasite kinases. The multistage activity of sapanisertib and its in vivo antimalarial efficacy, coupled with potent inhibition of at least two promising drug targets, provides an opportunity to reposition this pyrazolopyrimidine for malaria.

Sign up for our Newsletter