Malaria treatments are compromised by drug resistance, creating an urgent need to discover new drugs. We used a phenotypic high-throughput screening (HTS) platform to identify new antimalarials, uncovering three related pyrrole-, indole-, and indoline-based series with a shared α-azacyclic acetamide core. These compounds showed fast-killing activity on asexual blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum parasites, were not cytotoxic, and disrupted parasite intracellular pH and Na+ regulation similarly to cipargamin (KAE609), a clinically advanced inhibitor of the P. falciparum Na+ pump (PfATP4). PfATP4 is localized to the parasite plasma membrane and is essential for maintaining a low cytosolic Na+ concentration. Resistance selections on P. falciparum parasites with two α-azacyclic acetamide analogs identified mutations in PfATP4, and cross-resistance was observed across the α-azacyclic acetamides and KAE609, confirming PfATP4 as the target. PfATP4 is a well-established antimalarial target, and identification of additional PfATP4 inhibitors provides alternative avenues to disrupt its function.
Casas et al. (Mon,) studied this question.