Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aspartic proteinases are a family of enzymes involved in a number of important biological processes. In animals the enzyme renin has a hypertensive action through its role in the renin-angiotensin system. The retroviral aspartic proteinases, such as the HIV proteinase, are essential for maturation of the virus particle and inhibitors have a proven therapeutic record in the treatment of AIDS. The lysosomal aspartic proteinase cathepsin D has been implicated in tumorigenesis and the stomach enzyme pepsin, which plays a major physiological role in hydrolysis of acid-denatured proteins, is responsible for much of the tissue damage in peptic ulcer disease. Since aspartic proteinases also play major roles in amyloid disease, malaria and common fungal infections such as candidiasis, inhibitors to these enzymes are much sought after as potential therapeutic agents. In all aspartic proteinases, the catalytic aspartate residues are involved in an intricate arrangement of hydrogen bonds involving a solvent molecule which is presumed to be water. The catalytic mechanism is thought to involve nucleophilic attack of the active site water molecule on the scissile bond carbonyl generating a tetrahedral gem-diol intermediate. The design of inhibitors generally involves the use of short oligopeptides containing a transition state analogue which mimic this tetrahedral intermediate. The application of structure-based drug design to members of the aspartic proteinase family is the main subject of this review.
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PMID:Aspartic proteinases in disease: a structural perspective. 1195 98

X-ray quality crystals of an Fab fragment from a transmission-blocking monoclonal antibody 4B7 (MAb 4B7) against a sexual stage protein Pfs25 of Plasmodium falciparum were grown as uncomplexed and peptide-complexed forms. Initially, the intact immunoglobulin was crystallized because cleavage with pepsin or papain did not produce a homogeneous product. Further proteolytic trials with elastase produced a suitable Fab fragment from which crystals have been obtained, both for the free Fab and in complex with cyclic peptides and in the presence of linear peptides. While linear peptides bind to MAb 4B7, cyclic peptides modeled on a predicted beta-hairpin loop of the third EGF-like domain of Pfs25 bind better and readily co-crystallize with the Fab. The genes for the variable domain of the Fab have been cloned, sequenced and the primary amino-acid sequence for the complete Fab deduced. This work explores the use of glycerol as an additive and the modification of the peptide sequence outside the epitope for improving in the crystallization. Data sets have been collected from crystals of several Fab-peptide complexes and from uncomplexed Fab to resolutions ranging from 2.4 to 3.3 A. The packing arrangements of several crystal forms have been determined by molecular replacement, and refinement of their three-dimensional structures is in progress. The three-dimensional structure of this Fab complexed with the various peptides will aid in an understanding of the mode by which this antibody recognizes and prevents transmission of the malaria parasite.
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PMID:Crystallization, sequence and preliminary crystallographic data for transmission-blocking anti-malaria Fab 4B7 with cyclic peptides from the Pfs25 protein of P. falciparum. 1529 15

Nitric oxide (NO) is known to possess antiparasitic activity towards Plasmodium species. Parasite proteases are currently considered to be promising targets for antimalarial chemotherapy. In the present study, we have studied the inhibitory effect of NO on the activity of plasmepsin in Plasmodium vivax, the pepsin-like aspartic protease which is believed to be involved in the cleavage during hemoglobin degradation in Plasmodium falciparum. NO donors (+/-) (E)-4-ethyl-2-[(E)-hydroxyimino]-5-nitro-3-hexenamide (NOR-3), S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO), and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) were found to inhibit this plasmepsin activity in a dose-dependent manner in purified P. vivax aspartic protease enzyme extracts. This inhibitory effect may be attributable to the nitrosylation of the cysteine residue at the catalytic site. However, an inhibitor of aspartic protease activity, namely pepstatin, was also found to inhibit (IC50 3 microM ) the enzyme activity, which we have used as a positive control. Our results therefore provide novel insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms, and will be useful for designing strategies for selectively upregulating NO production in P. vivax infections for antimalarial chemotherapy and also biochemical adaptations of the malaria parasite for survival in the host erythrocytes with a better understanding of the protease substrate interactions.
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PMID:Parasite killing in Plasmodium vivax malaria by nitric oxide: implication of aspartic protease inhibition. 1559 89

Severe malaria has been, in part, associated with the ability of parasite infected red blood cells to aggregate together with uninfected erythrocytes to form rosettes via the parasite protein PfEMP-1. In this study, inhibitors of rosetting by the Plasmodium falciparum strain R-29, based on chemically modified heparin polysaccharides (IC 50 = 1.97 x 10 (-2) and 3.05 x 10 (-3) mg.mL (-1)) and their depolymerized, low molecular weight derivatives were identified with reduced anticoagulant and protease (renin, pepsin, and cathepsin-D) activities. Low molecular weight derivatives of the two most effective inhibitors were shown to have distinct minimum size and strain-specific structural requirements for rosette disruption. These also formed distinct complexes in solution when bound to platelet-factor IV.
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PMID:Disruption of rosetting in Plasmodium falciparum malaria with chemically modified heparin and low molecular weight derivatives possessing reduced anticoagulant and other serine protease inhibition activities. 1826 Jun 12

A three-dimensional structure of histo-aspartic protease (HAP), a pepsin-like enzyme from the causative agent of malaria Plasmodium falciparum, is suggested on the basis of homologous modeling followed by equilibration by the method of molecular dynamics. The presence of a His residue in the catalytic site instead of an Asp residue, which is characteristic of pepsin-like enzymes, and replacement of some other conserved residues in the active site make it possible for the enzyme to function by the covalent mechanism inherent in serine proteases. The detailed structures of HAP complexes with pepstatin, a noncovalent inhibitor of aspartic proteases, and phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, a covalent inhibitor of serine proteases, as well as with a pentapeptide substrate are discussed.
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PMID:[Modeling of substrate and inhibitory complexes of histidine-aspartic protease]. 1867 95

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-A 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.
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PMID:Crystal structures of the histo-aspartic protease (HAP) from Plasmodium falciparum. 1928 84

Plasmepsins (PMs) are pepsin-like aspartic proteases present in different species of parasite Plasmodium. Four Plasmodium spp. (P. vivax, P. ovale, P. malariae, and the most lethal P. falciparum) are mainly responsible for causing human malaria that affects millions worldwide. Due to the complexity and rate of parasite mutation coupled with regional variations, and the emergence of P. falciparum strains which are resistant to antimalarial agents such as chloroquine and sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine, there is constant pressure to find new and lasting chemotherapeutic drug therapies. Since many proteases represent therapeutic targets and PMs have been shown to play an important role in the survival of parasite, these enzymes have recently been identified as promising targets for the development of novel antimalarial drugs. The genome of P. falciparum encodes 10 PMs (PMI, PMII, PMIV-X and histo-aspartic protease (HAP)), 4 of which (PMI, PMII, PMIV and HAP) reside within the food vacuole, are directly involved in degradation of human hemoglobin, and share 50-79% amino acid sequence identity. This review focuses on structural studies of only these four enzymes, including their orthologs in other Plasmodium spp.. Almost all original crystallographic studies were performed with PMII, but more recent work on PMIV, PMI, and HAP resulted in a more complete picture of the structure-function relationship of vacuolar PMs. Many structures of inhibitor complexes of vacuolar plasmepsins, as well as their zymogens, have been reported in the last 15 years. Information gained by such studies will be helpful for the development of better inhibitors that could become a new class of potent antimalarial drugs. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Proteolysis 50 years after the discovery of lysosome.
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PMID:Structural studies of vacuolar plasmepsins. 2154 Jan 29

For past few decades, key objectives of rational drug discovery have been the designing of specific and selective ligands for target proteins. Infectious diseases like malaria are continuously becoming resistant to traditional medicines, which inculcates need for new approaches to design inhibitors for antimalarial targets. A novel method for ab initio designing of multi target specific pharmacophores using the interaction field maps of active sites of multiple proteins has been developed to design 'specificity' pharmacophores for aspartic proteases. The molecular interaction field grid maps of active sites of aspartic proteases (plasmepsin II & IV from Plasmodium falciparum, plasmepsin from Plasmodium vivax, pepsin & cathepsin D from human) are calculated and common pharmacophoric features for favourable binding spots in active sites are extracted in the form of cliques of graphs using inductive logic programming (ILP). The two pharmacophore ensembles are constructed from largest common cliques by imposing size of receptor active site (L) and domain-specific receptor-ligand information (S). The overlap of chemical space between two ensembles and the results of virtual screening of inhibitor database with known activities show that this method can design efficient pharmacophores with no prior ligand information.
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PMID:An Ab Initio Method for Designing Multi-Target Specific Pharmacophores using Complementary Interaction Field of Aspartic Proteases. 2749 Mar 84

Plasmepsins are a group of diverse aspartic proteases in the malaria parasite Plasmodium Their functions are strikingly multifaceted, ranging from hemoglobin degradation to secretory organelle protein processing for egress, invasion, and effector export. Some, particularly the digestive vacuole plasmepsins, have been extensively characterized, whereas others, such as the transmission-stage plasmepsins, are minimally understood. Some (e.g. plasmepsin V) have exquisite cleavage sequence specificity; others are fairly promiscuous. Some have canonical pepsin-like aspartic protease features, whereas others have unusual attributes, including the nepenthesin loop of plasmepsin V and a histidine in place of a catalytic aspartate in plasmepsin III. We have learned much about the functioning of these enzymes, but more remains to be discovered about their cellular roles and even their mechanisms of action. Their importance in many key aspects of parasite biology makes them intriguing targets for antimalarial chemotherapy. Further consideration of their characteristics suggests that some are more viable drug targets than others. Indeed, inhibitors of invasion and egress offer hope for a desperately needed new drug to combat this nefarious organism.
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PMID:Malaria parasite plasmepsins: More than just plain old degradative pepsins. 3236 62

Plasmodium parasites that cause malaria produce plasmepsins (PMs), pepsin-like aspartic proteases that are important antimalarial drug targets due to their role in host hemoglobin degradation. The enzymes are synthesized as inactive zymogens (pro-PMs), and the mechanism of their conversion to the active, mature forms has not been clearly elucidated. Our structural investigations of vacuolar pro-PMs with truncated prosegment (pro-tPMs) reveal that the formation of the S-shaped dimer is their innate property. Further structural studies, biochemical analysis, and molecular dynamics simulations indicate that disruption of the Tyr-Asp loop (121p-4), coordinated with the movement of the loop L1 (237-247) and helix H2 (101p-113p), is responsible for the extension of the pro-mature region (harboring the cleavage site). Consequently, under acidic pH conditions, these structural changes result in the dissociation of the dimers to monomers and the protonation of the residues in the prosegment prompts its unfolding. Subsequently, we demonstrated that the active site of the monomeric pro-tPMs with the unfolded prosegment is accessible for peptide substrate binding; in contrast, the active site is blocked in folded prosegment form of pro-tPMs. Thus, we propose a novel mechanism of auto-activation of vacuolar pro-tPMs that under acidic conditions can form a catalytically competent active site. One monomer cleaves the prosegment of the other one through a trans-activation process, resulting in formation of mature enzyme. As a result, once a mature enzyme is generated, it leads to the complete conversion of all the inactive pro-tPMs to their mature form. DATABASE: Atomic coordinates and structure factors have been submitted in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) under the PDB IDs 6KUB, 6KUC, and 6KUD.
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PMID:Activation mechanism of plasmepsins, pepsin-like aspartic proteases from Plasmodium, follows a unique trans-activation pathway. 3238 63


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