An alternative approach in antimalarial drug design

Tech ID: T-018688

Technology Description

Researchers in Sergei Djuranovic’s lab at Washington University have developed polybasic peptides and polymers to block Plasmodium falciparum adhesion as a treatment for malaria. These therapeutics reduce parasite infection of human cells, making this a promising alternative approach to by-pass the emerging resistance to artemisinins.

Different modifications of poly-L-lysine are effective against blood stage of malaria parasites (P. falciparum)

Sixty percent of transcripts from the genome of Plasmodium falciparum hold long polyadenosine runs that are translated into polylysine tracts, which do not elicit a response from mRNA surveillance pathways usually seen in human cells. These polybasic peptides equip the parasite with increased adhesion properties, an advantage in pathogenesis and infectivity. The therapeutic peptides would outcompete parasite versions to prevent that adhesion.

Stage of Research

The inventors have demonstrated the reduced infection of human cells in vitro in their initial proof-of-concept experiments. Currently, in vivo work is ongoing.

Publications

Applications

  • Treatment for malaria caused by P. falciparum

Key Advantages

  • Reduces infection of erythrocytes and prevents sequestration in organs
  • Targets pathway independent of artemisinin, bypassing established resistances

Patents: Pending

Related Web Links: Sergej Djuranovic Profile & Lab; Slavica Pavlovic-Djuranovic Profile

Categories

Inventors

Contact

Richards, Jennifer

richards.j@wustl.edu

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