Title of article :
Crystal Structures of the Histo-Aspartic Protease (HAP) from Plasmodium falciparum
Author/Authors :
Prasenjit Bhaumik، نويسنده , , Huogen Xiao، نويسنده , , Charity L. Parr، نويسنده , , Yoshiaki Kiso، نويسنده , , Alla Gustchina، نويسنده , , Rickey Y. Yada، نويسنده , , Alexander Wlodawer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
21
From page :
520
To page :
540
Abstract :
The structures of recombinant histo-aspartic protease (HAP) from malaria-causing parasite Plasmodium falciparum as apoenzyme and in complex with two inhibitors, pepstatin A and KNI-10006, were solved at 2.5-, 3.3-, and 3.05-Å resolutions, respectively. In the apoenzyme crystals, HAP forms a tight dimer not seen previously in any aspartic protease. The interactions between the monomers affect the conformation of two flexible loops, the functionally important “flap” (residues 70–83) and its structural equivalent in the C-terminal domain (residues 238–245), as well as the orientation of helix 225–235. The flap is found in an open conformation in the apoenzyme. Unexpectedly, the active site of the apoenzyme contains a zinc ion tightly bound to His32 and Asp215 from one monomer and to Glu278A from the other monomer, with the coordination of Zn resembling that seen in metalloproteases. The flap is closed in the structure of the pepstatin A complex, whereas it is open in the complex with KNI-10006. Although the binding mode of pepstatin A is significantly different from that in other pepsin-like aspartic proteases, its location in the active site makes unlikely the previously proposed hypothesis that HAP is a serine protease. The binding mode of KNI-10006 is unusual compared with the binding of other inhibitors from the KNI series to aspartic proteases. The novel features of the HAP active site could facilitate design of specific inhibitors used in the development of antimalarial drugs.
Keywords :
aspartic proteases , inhibitor binding , crystal structure
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1258195
Link To Document :
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