Ex Vivo Molecular Studies and In Silico Small Molecule Inhibition of Plasmodium falciparum Bromodomain Protein 1
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Date
2025-06-22
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Drugs Drug Candidates
Abstract
Background: Malaria remains a significant global health burden, particularly in sub-
Saharan Africa, accounting for high rates of illness and death. The growing resistance
to frontline antimalarial therapies underscores the urgent need for novel drug targets
and therapeutics. Bromodomain-containing proteins, which regulate gene expression
through chromatin remodeling, have gained attention as potential targets. Plasmodium
falciparum bromodomain protein 1 (Pf BDP1), a 55 kDa nuclear protein, plays a key role
in recognizing acetylated lysine residues and facilitating transcription during parasite
development. Methods: This study investigated ex vivo PfBDP1 gene mutations and
identified potential small molecule inhibitors using computational approaches. Malariapositive
blood samples were collected. Genomic DNA was extracted, assessed for quality,
and amplified using Pf BDP1-specific primers. DNA sequencing and alignment were
performed to determine single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). Structural modeling used
the PfBDP1 crystal structure (PDB ID: 7M97), and active site identification was conducted
using CASTp 3.0. Virtual screening and pharmacophore modeling were performed using
Pharmit and AutoDock Vina, followed by ADME/toxicity evaluations with SwissADME,
OSIRIS, and Discovery Studio. GROMACS was used for 100 ns molecular dynamics
simulations. Results: The malaria prevalence rate stood at 12.24%, and the sample size
was 165. Sequencing results revealed conserved PfBDP1 gene sequences compared to
the 3D7 reference strain. Virtual screening identified nine lead compounds with binding
affinities ranging from −9.8 to −10.7 kcal/mol. Of these, CHEMBL2216838 had a binding
affinity of −9.9 kcal/mol, with post-screening predictions of favorable drug-likeness (8.60),
a high drug score (0.78), superior pharmacokinetics, and a low toxicity profile compared
to chloroquine. Molecular dynamics simulations confirmed its stable interaction within
the PfBDP1 active site. Conclusions: Overall, this study makes a significant contribution
to the ongoing search for novel antimalarial drug targets by providing both molecular
and computational evidence for PfBDP1 as a promising therapeutic target. The prediction
of CHEMBL2216838 as a lead compound with favorable binding affinity, drug-likeness,
and safety profile, surpassing those of existing drugs like chloroquine, sets the stage for
preclinical validation and further structure-based drug design efforts. These findings are
supported by prior experimental evidence showing significant parasite inhibition and gene
suppression capability of predicted hits.
Description
Keywords
malaria, Plasmodium falciparum, DNA sequencing, small molecule inhibition, bromodomain protein 1