Military Medical Research (Jun 2022)

Identification of antimalarial targets of chloroquine by a combined deconvolution strategy of ABPP and MS-CETSA

  • Peng Gao,
  • Yan-Qing Liu,
  • Wei Xiao,
  • Fei Xia,
  • Jia-Yun Chen,
  • Li-Wei Gu,
  • Fan Yang,
  • Liu-Hai Zheng,
  • Jun-Zhe Zhang,
  • Qian Zhang,
  • Zhi-Jie Li,
  • Yu-Qing Meng,
  • Yong-Ping Zhu,
  • Huan Tang,
  • Qiao-Li Shi,
  • Qiu-Yan Guo,
  • Ying Zhang,
  • Cheng-Chao Xu,
  • Ling-Yun Dai,
  • Ji-Gang Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40779-022-00390-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Malaria is a devastating infectious disease that disproportionally threatens hundreds of millions of people in developing countries. In the history of anti-malaria campaign, chloroquine (CQ) has played an indispensable role, however, its mechanism of action (MoA) is not fully understood. Methods We used the principle of photo-affinity labeling and click chemistry-based functionalization in the design of a CQ probe and developed a combined deconvolution strategy of activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) and mass spectrometry-coupled cellular thermal shift assay (MS-CETSA) that identified the protein targets of CQ in an unbiased manner in this study. The interactions between CQ and these identified potential protein hits were confirmed by biophysical and enzymatic assays. Results We developed a novel clickable, photo-affinity chloroquine analog probe (CQP) which retains the antimalarial activity in the nanomole range, and identified a total of 40 proteins that specifically interacted and photo-crosslinked with CQP which was inhibited in the presence of excess CQ. Using MS-CETSA, we identified 83 candidate interacting proteins out of a total of 3375 measured parasite proteins. At the same time, we identified 8 proteins as the most potential hits which were commonly identified by both methods. Conclusions We found that CQ could disrupt glycolysis and energy metabolism of malarial parasites through direct binding with some of the key enzymes, a new mechanism that is different from its well-known inhibitory effect of hemozoin formation. This is the first report of identifying CQ antimalarial targets by a parallel usage of labeled (ABPP) and label-free (MS-CETSA) methods.

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