An Onto-Epistemic Framework for Systematic Discovery of Druggable Protein and Cell-Surface Receptors in Trypanosoma cruzi

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Abstract

The persistent therapeutic gap in Chagas disease stems largely from an incomplete understanding of which Trypanosoma cruzi components are both indispensable to parasite fitness and experimentally tractable. We propose a two-tiered strategy that first defines vulnerability in ontological termsparasite-essentiality, host-selectivity, stage expression profile, and structural addressability-and then validates each candidate through a progressively stringent epistemological pipeline. Starting with genome-wide annotations and stage-resolved transcriptomes, flux-balance modelling and CRISPR fitness screens winnow the proteome to a core set of essential, human-absent proteins. Structure prediction with AlphaFold2, pocket scoring, and epitope mapping next rank targets by druggability or immunogenic potential. Multi-criteria decision analysis integrates these metrics to prioritise the top ten receptors for experimental interrogation. Conditional knockouts , phenotypic rescue, small-molecule docking, antibody neutralisation assays, and in-vivo murine models constitute successive decision gates, each designed to falsify weak hypotheses early and conserve resources. This onto-epistemic framework not only accelerates identification of high-confidence targets such as TcP21, TcAkt, and GP63 metalloproteases but also provides a reproducible blueprint adaptable to other kinetoplastids. By unifying conceptual clarity with methodological rigour, the workflow maximises the probability that a validated receptor will translate into clinically viable therapies for Chagas disease.

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