Scientific Reports (May 2025)

HaloPROTAC3 does not trigger the degradation of the halotagged parasitophorous vacuole membrane protein UIS4 during Plasmodium liver stage development

  • Melanie Lam,
  • Alexandra Probst,
  • Laura Torres,
  • Ashley A. Lantigua,
  • Matthew E. Fishbaugher,
  • Jyothsna R. Kumar,
  • Manuel Saldivia,
  • Allison Torres,
  • Shreeya Hegde,
  • Maya Aleshnick,
  • Charlie Jennison,
  • Sarah G. H. Roberson,
  • Chester J. Joyner,
  • Ashley M. Vaughan,
  • Brandon K. Wilder,
  • Carole Manneville,
  • Erika L. Flannery,
  • David Marcellin,
  • Beat Nyfeler,
  • Zacharias Thiel,
  • Sebastian A. Mikolajczak,
  • Anke Harupa,
  • Gabriel Mitchell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-98257-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Targeted protein degradation (TPD) is a novel strategy for developing therapeutics against pathogens. Prior to causing malaria, Plasmodium parasites replicate within hepatocytes as liver stages, surrounded by a parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM). We hypothesized that TPD can be employed to trigger host-driven degradation of essential liver stage PVM proteins and lead to parasite death. To explore this, we took advantage of the proteolysis-targeting-chimera HaloPROTAC3, a molecule that recruits the host von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) E3 ligase to the HaloTag (HT). Parasites expressing HT fused to the host cytosol-exposed domain of the PVM protein UIS4 (UIS4-HT) were generated in Plasmodium berghei and Plasmodium cynomolgi, but only P. berghei UIS4-HT enabled productive liver stage infection experiments in vitro. Although HaloPROTAC3 triggered the degradation of HT proteins in host cells, it had no impact on the survival of P. berghei UIS4-HT liver stages. Furthermore, HaloPROTAC3 bound to P. berghei UIS4-HT but did not recruit VHL or trigger ubiquitination of the PVM. Overall, although this study did not establish whether host-driven TPD can degrade Plasmodium PVM proteins, it highlights the challenges of developing TPD approaches against novel targets and offers insights for advancing this therapeutic strategy against pathogens.

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