Abstract

A member of the M18 family of aspartyl aminopeptidases is expressed by all intra-erythrocytic stages of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum (PfM18AAP), with highest expression levels in rings. Functionally active recombinant enzyme, rPfM18AAP, and native enzyme in cytosolic extracts of malaria parasites are 560-kDa octomers that exhibit optimal activity at neutral pH and require the presence of metal ions to maintain enzymatic activity and stability. Like the human aspartyl aminopeptidase, the exopeptidase activity of PfM18AAP is exclusive to N-terminal acidic amino acids, glutamate and aspartate, making this enzyme of particular interest and suggesting that it may function alongside the malaria cytosolic neutral aminopeptidases in the release of amino acids from host hemoglobin-derived peptides. Whereas immunocytochemical studies using transgenic P. falciparum parasites show that PfM18AAP is expressed in the cytosol, immunoblotting experiments revealed that the enzyme is also trafficked out of the parasite into the surrounding parasitophorous vacuole. Antisense-mediated knockdown of PfM18AAP results in a lethal phenotype as a result of significant intracellular damage and validates this enzyme as a target at which novel antimalarial drugs could be directed. Novel phosphinic derivatives of aspartate and glutamate showed modest inhibition of rPfM18AAP but did not inhibit malaria growth in culture. However, we were able to draw valuable observations concerning the structure-activity relationship of these inhibitors that can be employed in future inhibitor optimization studies.

Highlights

  • Tate and glutamate showed modest inhibition of rPfM18AAP but did not inhibit malaria growth in culture

  • Interrogation of PlasmoDB Discovered a Putative Aspartyl Aminopeptidase—PFI1570c, the putative aspartyl aminopeptidase of P. falciparum is located on chromosome 9 and as annotated by PlasmoDB consists of a single open reading frame of 1713 bp that translates into a protein of 570 amino acids

  • Whereas low levels of identity exists between the PfM18AAP and the human (31%) and yeast M18 aspartyl aminopeptidases (27%) the three histidine residues (His-94, His-170, and His-440) that are predicted from site-directed mutagenesis studies to be critical for enzymatic activity and another (His-352) essential for stabilization of quaternary structure of human M18AAP are conserved and are indicated in the alignment presented in supplementary materials Fig. S1

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Summary

Introduction

Tate and glutamate showed modest inhibition of rPfM18AAP but did not inhibit malaria growth in culture. Novel inhibitors of aspartyl aminopeptidases that exhibit modest activity against the native and recombinant PfM18AAP do not prevent the growth of the parasites in culture.

Results
Conclusion

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