次黄嘌呤
嘌呤
化学
恶性疟原虫
核苷酸
鸟嘌呤
次黄嘌呤鸟嘌呤磷酸核糖转移酶
次黄嘌呤磷酸核糖转移酶
酶
生物化学
立体化学
酶动力学
嘌呤代谢
磷酸核糖转移酶
活动站点
生物
疟疾
基因
突变体
免疫学
作者
Dianne T. Keough,Tina S. Skinner‐Adams,Malcolm K. Jones,Ai-Lin Ng,Ian M. Brereton,Luke W. Guddat,John de Jersey
摘要
The malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum depends on the purine salvage enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGXPRT) to convert purine bases from the host to nucleotides needed for DNA and RNA synthesis. An approach to developing antimalarial drugs is to use HGXPRT to convert introduced purine base analogs to nucleotides that are toxic to the parasite. This strategy requires that these compounds be good substrates for the parasite enzyme but poor substrates for the human counterpart, HGPRT. Bases with a chlorine atom in the 6-position or a nitrogen in the 8-position exhibited strong discrimination between P. falciparum HGXPRT and human HGPRT. The kcat/Km values for the Plasmodium enzyme using 6-chloroguanine and 8-azaguanine as substrates were 50−80-fold and 336-fold higher than for the human enzyme, respectively. These and other bases were effective in inhibiting the growth of the parasite in vitro, giving IC50 values as low as 1 μM.
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