- Gaillard, Natacha;
- Sharma, Ashwani;
- Abbaali, Izra;
- Liu, Tianyang;
- Shilliday, Fiona;
- Cook, Alexander D;
- Ehrhard, Valentin;
- Bangera, Mamata;
- Roberts, Anthony J;
- Moores, Carolyn A;
- Morrissette, Naomi;
- Steinmetz, Michel O
Infectious diseases caused by apicomplexan parasites remain a global public health threat. The presence of multiple ligand-binding sites in tubulin makes this protein an attractive target for anti-parasite drug discovery. However, despite remarkable successes as anti-cancer agents, the rational development of protozoan parasite-specific tubulin drugs has been hindered by a lack of structural and biochemical information on protozoan tubulins. Here, we present atomic structures for a protozoan tubulin and microtubule and delineate the architectures of apicomplexan tubulin drug-binding sites. Based on this information, we rationally designed the parasite-specific tubulin inhibitor parabulin and show that it inhibits growth of parasites while displaying no effects on human cells. Our work presents for the first time the rational design of a species-specific tubulin drug providing a framework to exploit structural differences between human and protozoa tubulin variants enabling the development of much-needed, novel parasite inhibitors.