Transgenic pyrimethamine resistantPlasmodium bergheias a model forin vivoanti-DHFR drug testing

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Abstract

Inhibitors for Plasmodium falciparum dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) form an important class of antimalarial drugs widely used for malaria treatment, but have been compromised by development of resistance to the drugs. Mutations in DHFR are the main contributing factors to the resistance. Although new, rationally designed antifolates active against resistant P. falciparum , such as P218, have been developed, the activity against the quadruple mutant P. falciparum (V1/S) has only been demonstrated in vitro , and in vivo activity has only been shown in SCID mice. A convenient in vivo model for antifolate testing is desirable. In this study, the endogenous P. berghei dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase ( Pbdhfr -ts) gene was successfully replaced by quadruple dhfr-ts mutant gene from P. falciparum (N51I+C59R+S108N+I164L). The transgenic parasite gained resistance to pyrimethamine but not to other class of antimalarial drugs. While 30 mg/kg of pyrimethamine could not inhibit the transgenic parasite, P218 could inhibit the transgenic parasite with the ED 50 of 0.11±0.02 mg/kg, a level similar to the P. falciparum in SCID mice model. These results demonstrated the validity of our model and showed that P218 was very potent against quadruple Pfdhfr-ts mutant parasite, in vivo .

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0