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  • Hypothesis-generating proteome perturbation to identify NEU-4438 and acoziborole modes of action in the African Trypanosome.

Hypothesis-generating proteome perturbation to identify NEU-4438 and acoziborole modes of action in the African Trypanosome.

iScience (2022-10-29)
Amrita Sharma, Michael Cipriano, Lori Ferrins, Stephen L Hajduk, Kojo Mensa-Wilmot
ABSTRACT

NEU-4438 is a lead for the development of drugs against Trypanosoma brucei, which causes human African trypanosomiasis. Optimized with phenotypic screening, targets of NEU-4438 are unknown. Herein, we present a cell perturbome workflow that compares NEU-4438's molecular modes of action to those of SCYX-7158 (acoziborole). Following a 6 h perturbation of trypanosomes, NEU-4438 and acoziborole reduced steady-state amounts of 68 and 92 unique proteins, respectively. After analysis of proteomes, hypotheses formulated for modes of action were tested: Acoziborole and NEU-4438 have different modes of action. Whereas NEU-4438 prevented DNA biosynthesis and basal body maturation, acoziborole destabilized CPSF3 and other proteins, inhibited polypeptide translation, and reduced endocytosis of haptoglobin-hemoglobin. These data point to CPSF3-independent modes of action for acoziborole. In case of polypharmacology, the cell-perturbome workflow elucidates modes of action because it is target-agnostic. Finally, the workflow can be used in any cell that is amenable to proteomic and molecular biology experiments.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-c-Myc antibody produced in rabbit, ~0.5 mg/mL, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous solution
Sigma-Aldrich
Cycloheximide, from microbial, ≥94% (TLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Tubulin Antibody, clone YL1/2, clone YL1/2, Chemicon®, from rat
Sigma-Aldrich
Haptoglobin (Phenotype 1-1) from human plasma, ≥95% (SDS-PAGE)