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Dive into the research topics where Mariana Justino de Almeida is active.

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Featured researches published by Mariana Justino de Almeida.


Nature | 2015

A novel multiple-stage antimalarial agent that inhibits protein synthesis

Beatriz Baragaña; Irene Hallyburton; Marcus C. S. Lee; Neil R. Norcross; Raffaella Grimaldi; Thomas D. Otto; William R. Proto; Andrew M. Blagborough; Stephan Meister; Grennady Wirjanata; Andrea Ruecker; Leanna M. Upton; Tara S. Abraham; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Anupam Pradhan; Achim Porzelle; María Santos Martínez; Judith M. Bolscher; Andrew Woodland; Suzanne Norval; Fabio Zuccotto; John Thomas; Frederick R. C. Simeons; Laste Stojanovski; Maria Osuna-Cabello; Patrick M. Brock; Thomas S. Churcher; Katarzyna A. Sala; Sara E. Zakutansky; María Belén Jiménez-Díaz

There is an urgent need for new drugs to treat malaria, with broad therapeutic potential and novel modes of action, to widen the scope of treatment and to overcome emerging drug resistance. Here we describe the discovery of DDD107498, a compound with a potent and novel spectrum of antimalarial activity against multiple life-cycle stages of the Plasmodium parasite, with good pharmacokinetic properties and an acceptable safety profile. DDD107498 demonstrates potential to address a variety of clinical needs, including single-dose treatment, transmission blocking and chemoprotection. DDD107498 was developed from a screening programme against blood-stage malaria parasites; its molecular target has been identified as translation elongation factor 2 (eEF2), which is responsible for the GTP-dependent translocation of the ribosome along messenger RNA, and is essential for protein synthesis. This discovery of eEF2 as a viable antimalarial drug target opens up new possibilities for drug discovery.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

(+)-SJ733, a clinical candidate for malaria that acts through ATP4 to induce rapid host-mediated clearance of Plasmodium

María Belén Jiménez-Díaz; Daniel H. Ebert; Yandira Salinas; Anupam Pradhan; Adele M. Lehane; Marie-Eve Myrand-Lapierre; Kathleen O’Loughlin; David M. Shackleford; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Angela K. Carrillo; Julie Clark; Adelaide S. M. Dennis; Jonathon Diep; Xiaoyan Deng; Sandra Duffy; Aaron N. Endsley; Greg Fedewa; W. Armand Guiguemde; María G. Gómez; Gloria Holbrook; Jeremy A. Horst; Charles C. Kim; Jian Liu; Marcus C. S. Lee; Amy Matheny; María Santos Martínez; Gregory Miller; Ane Rodríguez-Alejandre; Laura Sanz; Martina Sigal

Significance Useful antimalarial drugs must be rapidly acting, highly efficacious, and have low potential for developing resistance. (+)-SJ733 targets a Plasmodium cation-transporting ATPase, ATP4. (+)-SJ733 cleared parasites in vivo as quickly as artesunate by specifically inducing eryptosis/senescence in infected, treated erythrocytes. Although in vitro selection of pfatp4 mutants with (+)-SJ733 proceeded with moderate frequency, during in vivo selection of pbatp4 mutants, resistance emerged slowly and produced marginally resistant mutants with poor fitness. In addition, (+)-SJ733 met all other criteria for a clinical candidate, including high oral bioavailability, a high safety margin, and transmission blocking activity. These results demonstrate that targeting ATP4 has great potential to deliver useful drugs for malaria eradication. Drug discovery for malaria has been transformed in the last 5 years by the discovery of many new lead compounds identified by phenotypic screening. The process of developing these compounds as drug leads and studying the cellular responses they induce is revealing new targets that regulate key processes in the Plasmodium parasites that cause malaria. We disclose herein that the clinical candidate (+)-SJ733 acts upon one of these targets, ATP4. ATP4 is thought to be a cation-transporting ATPase responsible for maintaining low intracellular Na+ levels in the parasite. Treatment of parasitized erythrocytes with (+)-SJ733 in vitro caused a rapid perturbation of Na+ homeostasis in the parasite. This perturbation was followed by profound physical changes in the infected cells, including increased membrane rigidity and externalization of phosphatidylserine, consistent with eryptosis (erythrocyte suicide) or senescence. These changes are proposed to underpin the rapid (+)-SJ733-induced clearance of parasites seen in vivo. Plasmodium falciparum ATPase 4 (pfatp4) mutations that confer resistance to (+)-SJ733 carry a high fitness cost. The speed with which (+)-SJ733 kills parasites and the high fitness cost associated with resistance-conferring mutations appear to slow and suppress the selection of highly drug-resistant mutants in vivo. Together, our data suggest that inhibitors of PfATP4 have highly attractive features for fast-acting antimalarials to be used in the global eradication campaign.


Nature | 2016

Mitofusin 2 maintains haematopoietic stem cells with extensive lymphoid potential

Larry L. Luchsinger; Mariana Justino de Almeida; David J. Corrigan; Melanie Mumau; Hans-Willem Snoeck

Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which sustain production of all blood cell lineages, rely on glycolysis for ATP production, yet little attention has been paid to the role of mitochondria. Here we show in mice that the short isoform of a critical regulator of HSCs, Prdm16 (refs 4, 5), induces mitofusin 2 (Mfn2), a protein involved in mitochondrial fusion and in tethering of mitochondria to the endoplasmic reticulum. Overexpression and deletion studies, including single-cell transplantation assays, revealed that Mfn2 is specifically required for the maintenance of HSCs with extensive lymphoid potential, but not, or less so, for the maintenance of myeloid-dominant HSCs. Mfn2 increased buffering of intracellular Ca2+, an effect mediated through its endoplasmic reticulum–mitochondria tethering activity, thereby negatively regulating nuclear translocation and transcriptional activity of nuclear factor of activated T cells (Nfat). Nfat inhibition rescued the effects of Mfn2 deletion in HSCs, demonstrating that negative regulation of Nfat is the prime downstream mechanism of Mfn2 in the maintenance of HSCs with extensive lymphoid potential. Mitochondria therefore have an important role in HSCs. These findings provide a mechanism underlying clonal heterogeneity among HSCs and may lead to the design of approaches to bias HSC differentiation into desired lineages after transplantation.


Molecular Microbiology | 2015

Balancing drug resistance and growth rates via compensatory mutations in the Plasmodium falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter

Ines Petersen; Stanislaw J. Gabryszewski; Geoffrey L. Johnston; Satish K. Dhingra; Andrea Ecker; Rebecca E. Lewis; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Judith Straimer; Philipp P. Henrich; Eugene Palatulan; David J. Johnson; Olivia Coburn-Flynn; Cecilia G. Sanchez; Adele M. Lehane; Michael Lanzer; David A. Fidock

The widespread use of chloroquine to treat Plasmodium falciparum infections has resulted in the selection and dissemination of variant haplotypes of the primary resistance determinant PfCRT. These haplotypes have encountered drug pressure and within‐host competition with wild‐type drug‐sensitive parasites. To examine these selective forces in vitro, we genetically engineered P. falciparum to express geographically diverse PfCRT haplotypes. Variant alleles from the Philippines (PH1 and PH2, which differ solely by the C72S mutation) both conferred a moderate gain of chloroquine resistance and a reduction in growth rates in vitro. Of the two, PH2 showed higher IC50 values, contrasting with reduced growth. Furthermore, a highly mutated pfcrt allele from Cambodia (Cam734) conferred moderate chloroquine resistance and enhanced growth rates, when tested against wild‐type pfcrt in co‐culture competition assays. These three alleles mediated cross‐resistance to amodiaquine, an antimalarial drug widely used in Africa. Each allele, along with the globally prevalent Dd2 and 7G8 alleles, rendered parasites more susceptible to lumefantrine, the partner drug used in the leading first‐line artemisinin‐based combination therapy. These data reveal ongoing region‐specific evolution of PfCRT that impacts drug susceptibility and relative fitness in settings of mixed infections, and raise important considerations about optimal agents to treat chloroquine‐resistant malaria.


Molecular Microbiology | 2016

CRISPR‐Cas9‐modified pfmdr1 protects Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages and gametocytes against a class of piperazine‐containing compounds but potentiates artemisinin‐based combination therapy partner drugs

Caroline L. Ng; Giulia Siciliano; Marcus C. S. Lee; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Victoria C. Corey; Selina Bopp; Lucia Bertuccini; Sergio Wittlin; Rachel G. Kasdin; Amélie Le Bihan; Martine Clozel; Elizabeth A. Winzeler; Pietro Alano; David A. Fidock

Emerging resistance to first‐line antimalarial combination therapies threatens malaria treatment and the global elimination campaign. Improved therapeutic strategies are required to protect existing drugs and enhance treatment efficacy. We report that the piperazine‐containing compound ACT‐451840 exhibits single‐digit nanomolar inhibition of the Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages and transmissible gametocyte forms. Genome sequence analyses of in vitro‐derived ACT‐451840‐resistant parasites revealed single nucleotide polymorphisms in pfmdr1, which encodes a digestive vacuole membrane‐bound ATP‐binding cassette transporter known to alter P. falciparum susceptibility to multiple first‐line antimalarials. CRISPR‐Cas9 based gene editing confirmed that PfMDR1 point mutations mediated ACT‐451840 resistance. Resistant parasites demonstrated increased susceptibility to the clinical drugs lumefantrine, mefloquine, quinine and amodiaquine. Stage V gametocytes harboring Cas9‐introduced pfmdr1 mutations also acquired ACT‐451840 resistance. These findings reveal that PfMDR1 mutations can impart resistance to compounds active against asexual blood stages and mature gametocytes. Exploiting PfMDR1 resistance mechanisms provides new opportunities for developing disease‐relieving and transmission‐blocking antimalarials.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2015

Subtle Changes in Endochin-Like Quinolone Structure Alter the Site of Inhibition within the Cytochrome bc1 Complex of Plasmodium falciparum

Allison M. Stickles; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Joanne M. Morrisey; Kayla Sheridan; Isaac P. Forquer; Aaron Nilsen; Rolf W. Winter; Jeremy N. Burrows; David A. Fidock; Akhil B. Vaidya; Michael K. Riscoe

ABSTRACT The cytochrome bc1 complex (cyt bc1) is the third component of the mitochondrial electron transport chain and is the target of several potent antimalarial compounds, including the naphthoquinone atovaquone (ATV) and the 4(1H)-quinolone ELQ-300. Mechanistically, cyt bc1 facilitates the transfer of electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c and contains both oxidative (Qo) and reductive (Qi) catalytic sites that are amenable to small-molecule inhibition. Although many antimalarial compounds, including ATV, effectively target the Qo site, it has been challenging to design selective Qi site inhibitors with the ability to circumvent clinical ATV resistance, and little is known about how chemical structure contributes to site selectivity within cyt bc1. Here, we used the proposed Qi site inhibitor ELQ-300 to generate a drug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum clone containing an I22L mutation at the Qi region of cyt b. Using this D1 clone and the Y268S Qo mutant strain, P. falciparum Tm90-C2B, we created a structure-activity map of Qi versus Qo site selectivity for a series of endochin-like 4(1H)-quinolones (ELQs). We found that Qi site inhibition was associated with compounds containing 6-position halogens or aryl 3-position side chains, while Qo site inhibition was favored by 5,7-dihalogen groups or 7-position substituents. In addition to identifying ELQ-300 as a preferential Qi site inhibitor, our data suggest that the 4(1H)-quinolone scaffold is compatible with binding to either site of cyt bc1 and that minor chemical changes can influence Qo or Qi site inhibition by the ELQs.


Cell Stem Cell | 2017

Dye-Independent Methods Reveal Elevated Mitochondrial Mass in Hematopoietic Stem Cells

Mariana Justino de Almeida; Larry L. Luchsinger; David J. Corrigan; Linda J. Williams; Hans-Willem Snoeck

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) produce most cellular energy through glycolysis rather than through mitochondrial respiration. Consistent with this notion, mitochondrial mass has been reported to be low in HSCs. However, we found that staining with MitoTracker Green, a commonly used dye to measure mitochondrial content, leads to artefactually low fluorescence specifically in HSCs because of dye efflux. Using mtDNA quantification, enumeration of mitochondrial nucleoids, and fluorescence intensity of a genetically encoded mitochondrial reporter, we unequivocally show here that HSCs and multipotential progenitors (MPPs) have higher mitochondrial mass than lineage-committed progenitors and mature cells. Despite similar mitochondrial mass, respiratory capacity of MPPs exceeds that of HSCs. Furthermore, although elevated mitophagy has been invoked to explain low mitochondrial mass in HSCs, we observed that mitochondrial turnover capacity is comparatively low in HSCs. We propose that the role of mitochondria in HSC biology may have to be revisited in light of these findings.


Nature | 2016

Corrigendum: A novel multiple-stage antimalarial agent that inhibits protein synthesis

Beatriz Baragaña; Irene Hallyburton; Marcus C. S. Lee; Neil R. Norcross; Raffaella Grimaldi; Thomas D. Otto; William R. Proto; Andrew M. Blagborough; Stephan Meister; Grennady Wirjanata; Andrea Ruecker; Leanna M. Upton; Tara S. Abraham; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Anupam Pradhan; Achim Porzelle; María Santos Martínez; Judith M. Bolscher; Andrew Woodland; Torsten Luksch; Suzanne Norval; Fabio Zuccotto; J. E. Thomas; Frederick R. C. Simeons; Laste Stojanovski; Maria Osuna-Cabello; Paddy M. Brock; Thomas S. Churcher; Katarzyna A. Sala; Sara E. Zakutansky

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/nature14451


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2018

PRDM16 isoforms differentially regulate normal and leukemic hematopoiesis and inflammatory gene signature

David J. Corrigan; Larry L. Luchsinger; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Linda J. Williams; Alexandros Strikoudis; Hans-Willem Snoeck

PRDM16 is a transcriptional coregulator involved in translocations in acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndromes, and T acute lymphoblastic leukemia that is highly expressed in and required for the maintenance of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), and can be aberrantly expressed in AML. Prdm16 is expressed as full-length (fPrdm16) and short (sPrdm16) isoforms, the latter lacking the N-terminal PR domain. The role of both isoforms in normal and malignant hematopoiesis is unclear. We show here that fPrdm16 was critical for HSC maintenance, induced multiple genes involved in GTPase signaling, and repressed inflammation, while sPrdm16 supported B cell development biased toward marginal zone B cells and induced an inflammatory signature. In a mouse model of human MLL-AF9 leukemia, fPrdm16 extended latency, while sPrdm16 shortened latency and induced a strong inflammatory signature, including several cytokines and chemokines that are associated with myelodysplasia and with a worse prognosis in human AML. Finally, in human NPM1-mutant and in MLL-translocated AML, high expression of PRDM16, which negatively impacts outcome, was associated with inflammatory gene expression, thus corroborating the mouse data. Our observations demonstrate distinct roles for Prdm16 isoforms in normal HSCs and AML, and identify sPrdm16 as one of the drivers of prognostically adverse inflammation in leukemia.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Erratum: (+)-SJ733, a clinical candidate for malaria that acts through ATP4 to induce rapid host-mediated clearance of Plasmodium (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2014) 111 (E5455-E5462) 1 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1414221111)

María Belén Jiménez-Díaz; Daniel H. Ebert; Yandira Salinas; Anupam Pradhan; Adele M. Lehane; Marie-Eve Myrand-Lapierre; Kathleen O'Loughlin; David M. Shackleford; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Angela K. Carrillo; Julie Clark; Adelaide S. M. Dennis; Jonathon Diep; Xiaoyan Deng; Sandra Duffy; Aaron N. Endsley; Greg Fedewa; Wendyam Armand Guiguemde; María G. Gómez; Gloria Holbrook; Jeremy A. Horst; Charles C. Kim; Jian Liu; Marcus C. S. Lee; Amy Matheny; María Santosmartínez; Gregory E. Miller; Ane Rodríguez-Alejandre; Laura Sanz; Martina Sigal

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Anupam Pradhan

University of South Florida

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David A. Fidock

Columbia University Medical Center

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Hans-Willem Snoeck

Columbia University Medical Center

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Larry L. Luchsinger

Columbia University Medical Center

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Adele M. Lehane

Australian National University

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