33 results on '"Paul A. Sigala"'
Search Results
2. Malaria parasites require a divergent heme oxygenase for apicoplast gene expression and biogenesis
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Amanda Mixon Blackwell, Yasaman Jami-Alahmadi, Armiyaw S Nasamu, Shota Kudo, Akinobu Senoo, Celine Slam, Kouhei Tsumoto, James A Wohlschlegel, Jose Manuel Martinez Caaveiro, Daniel E Goldberg, and Paul A Sigala
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malaria ,apicoplast ,heme oxygenase ,gene expression ,RNA ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Malaria parasites have evolved unusual metabolic adaptations that specialize them for growth within heme-rich human erythrocytes. During blood-stage infection, Plasmodium falciparum parasites internalize and digest abundant host hemoglobin within the digestive vacuole. This massive catabolic process generates copious free heme, most of which is biomineralized into inert hemozoin. Parasites also express a divergent heme oxygenase (HO)-like protein (PfHO) that lacks key active-site residues and has lost canonical HO activity. The cellular role of this unusual protein that underpins its retention by parasites has been unknown. To unravel PfHO function, we first determined a 2.8 Å-resolution X-ray structure that revealed a highly α-helical fold indicative of distant HO homology. Localization studies unveiled PfHO targeting to the apicoplast organelle, where it is imported and undergoes N-terminal processing but retains most of the electropositive transit peptide. We observed that conditional knockdown of PfHO was lethal to parasites, which died from defective apicoplast biogenesis and impaired isoprenoid-precursor synthesis. Complementation and molecular-interaction studies revealed an essential role for the electropositive N-terminus of PfHO, which selectively associates with the apicoplast genome and enzymes involved in nucleic acid metabolism and gene expression. PfHO knockdown resulted in a specific deficiency in levels of apicoplast-encoded RNA but not DNA. These studies reveal an essential function for PfHO in apicoplast maintenance and suggest that Plasmodium repurposed the conserved HO scaffold from its canonical heme-degrading function in the ancestral chloroplast to fulfill a critical adaptive role in organelle gene expression.
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- 2024
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3. Direct tests of cytochrome c and c 1 functions in the electron transport chain of malaria parasites
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Tanya J. Espino-Sanchez, Henry Wienkers, Rebecca G. Marvin, Shai-anne Nalder, Aldo E. García-Guerrero, Peter E. VanNatta, Yasaman Jami-Alahmadi, Amanda Mixon Blackwell, Frank G. Whitby, James A. Wohlschlegel, Matthew T. Kieber-Emmons, Christopher P. Hill, and Paul A. Sigala
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Multidisciplinary - Abstract
The mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) of Plasmodium malaria parasites is a major antimalarial drug target, but critical cytochrome (cyt) functions remain unstudied and enigmatic. Parasites express two distinct cyt c homologs ( c and c -2) with unusually sparse sequence identity and uncertain fitness contributions. P. falciparum cyt c -2 is the most divergent eukaryotic cyt c homolog currently known and has sequence features predicted to be incompatible with canonical ETC function. We tagged both cyt c homologs and the related cyt c 1 for inducible knockdown. Translational repression of cyt c and cyt c 1 was lethal to parasites, which died from ETC dysfunction and impaired ubiquinone recycling. In contrast, cyt c -2 knockdown or knockout had little impact on blood-stage growth, indicating that parasites rely fully on the more conserved cyt c for ETC function. Biochemical and structural studies revealed that both cyt c and c -2 are hemylated by holocytochrome c synthase, but UV-vis absorbance and EPR spectra strongly suggest that cyt c -2 has an unusually open active site in which heme is stably coordinated by only a single axial amino acid ligand and can bind exogenous small molecules. These studies provide a direct dissection of cytochrome functions in the ETC of malaria parasites and identify a highly divergent Plasmodium cytochrome c with molecular adaptations that defy a conserved role in eukaryotic evolution.
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- 2023
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4. Direct Tests of Cytochrome Function in the Electron Transport Chain of Malaria Parasites
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Tanya J. Espino-Sanchez, Henry Wienkers, Rebecca G. Marvin, Shai-anne Nalder, Aldo E. García-Guerrero, Peter E. VanNatta, Yasaman Jami-Alahmadi, Amanda Mixon Blackwell, Frank G. Whitby, James A. Wohlschlegel, Matthew T. Kieber-Emmons, Christopher P. Hill, and Paul A. Sigala
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Article - Abstract
The mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) ofPlasmodiummalaria parasites is a major antimalarial drug target, but critical cytochrome functions remain unstudied and enigmatic. Parasites express two distinct cytchomologs (candc-2) with unusually sparse sequence identity and uncertain fitness contributions.P. falciparumcytc-2 is the most divergent eukaryotic cytchomolog currently known and has sequence features predicted to be incompatible with canonical ETC function. We tagged both cytchomologs and the related cytc1for inducible knockdown. Translational repression of cytcand cytc1was lethal to parasites, which died from ETC dysfunction and impaired ubiquinone recycling. In contrast, cytc-2 knockdown or knock-out had little impact on blood-stage growth, indicating that parasites rely fully on the more conserved cytcfor ETC function. Biochemical and structural studies revealed that both cytcandc-2 are hemylated by holocytochromecsynthase, but UV-vis absorbance and EPR spectra strongly suggest that cytc-2 has an unusually open active site in which heme is stably coordinated by only a single axial amino-acid ligand and can bind exogenous small molecules. These studies provide a direct dissection of cytochrome functions in the ETC of malaria parasites and identify a highly divergentPlasmodiumcytochromecwith molecular adaptations that defy a conserved role in eukaryotic evolution.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTMitochondria are critical organelles in eukaryotic cells that drive oxidative metabolism. The mitochondrion ofPlasmodiummalaria parasites is a major drug target that has many differences from human cells and remains poorly studied. One key difference from humans is that malaria parasites express two cytochromecproteins that differ significantly from each other and play untested and uncertain roles in the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC). Our study revealed that one cytcis essential for ETC function and parasite viability while the second, more divergent protein has unusual structural and biochemical properties and is not required for growth of blood-stage parasites. This work elucidates key biochemical properties and evolutionary differences in the mitochondrial ETC of malaria parasites.
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- 2023
5. Plasmodium heme biosynthesis: To be or not to be essential?
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Daniel E Goldberg and Paul A Sigala
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2017
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6. Decision letter: A choline-releasing glycerophosphodiesterase essential for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis and blood stage development in the malaria parasite
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Paul A Sigala
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- 2022
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7. Multiple-Streams Focusing-Based Cell Separation in High Viscoelasticity Flow
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Haidong Feng, Dhruv Patel, Jules J. Magda, Sage Geher, Paul A. Sigala, and Bruce K. Gale
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General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry - Abstract
Viscoelastic flow has been widely used in microfluidic particle separation processes, in which particles get focused on the channel center in diluted viscoelastic flow. In this paper, the transition from single-stream focusing to multiple-streams focusing (MSF) in high viscoelastic flow is observed, which is applied for cell separation processes. Particle focusing stream bifurcation is caused by the balance between elastic force and viscoelastic secondary flow drag force. The influence of cell physical properties, such as cell dimension, shape, and deformability, on the formation of multiple-streams focusing is studied in detail. Particle separation is realized utilizing different separation criteria. The size-based separation of red (RBC) and white (WBC) blood cells is demonstrated in which cells get focused in different streams based on their dimension difference. Cells with different deformabilities get stretched in the viscoelastic flow, leading to the change of focusing streams, and this property is harnessed to separate red blood cells infected with the malaria parasite
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- 2022
8. Author response: Critical role for isoprenoids in apicoplast biogenesis by malaria parasites
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Megan Okada, Krithika Rajaram, Russell P Swift, Amanda Mixon, John Alan Maschek, Sean T Prigge, and Paul A Sigala
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- 2022
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9. Divergent acyl carrier protein decouples mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis from fatty acid synthesis in malaria parasites
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Paul A. Sigala, Jaime Sepulveda, Seyi Falekun, James A. Wohlschlegel, Hahnbeom Park, and Yasaman Jami-Alahmadi
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Fe-S cluster synthesis ,Protozoan Proteins ,acyl carrier protein ,Mitochondrion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,falciparum ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Biology (General) ,Aetiology ,Microbiology and Infectious Disease ,Organelle Biogenesis ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,Fatty Acids ,General Medicine ,Cell biology ,mitochondria ,Acyl carrier protein ,Infectious Diseases ,Medicine ,Infection ,Research Article ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Iron ,infectious disease ,Plasmodium falciparum ,malaria ,chemical biology ,P. falciparum ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Rare Diseases ,Biosynthesis ,Biochemistry and Chemical Biology ,parasitic diseases ,biochemistry ,Fatty acid synthesis ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,microbiology ,biology.organism_classification ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,chemistry ,Coenzyme Q – cytochrome c reductase ,biology.protein ,organelle adaptation ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Function (biology) ,Biogenesis ,Sulfur - Abstract
Plasmodium falciparummalaria parasites are early-diverging eukaryotes with many unusual metabolic adaptations. Understanding these adaptations will give insight into parasite evolution and unveil new parasite-specific drug targets. Most eukaryotic cells retain a mitochondrial fatty acid synthesis (FASII) pathway whose acyl carrier protein (mACP) and 4-phosphopantetheine (Ppant) prosthetic group provide a soluble scaffold for acyl chain synthesis. In yeast and humans, mACP also functions to biochemically couple FASII activity to electron transport chain (ETC) assembly and Fe-S cluster biogenesis. In contrast to most eukaryotes, thePlasmodiummitochondrion lacks FASII enzymes yet curiously retains a divergent mACP lacking a Ppant group. We report that ligand-dependent knockdown of mACP is lethal to parasites, indicating an essential FASII-independent function. Decyl-ubiquinone rescues parasites temporarily from death, suggesting a dominant dysfunction of the mitochondrial ETC followed by broader cellular defects. Biochemical studies reveal thatPlasmodiummACP binds and stabilizes the Isd11-Nfs1 complex required for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis, despite lacking the Ppant group required for this association in other eukaryotes, and knockdown of parasite mACP causes loss of both Nfs1 and the Rieske Fe-S protein in ETC Complex III. This work reveals thatPlasmodiumparasites have evolved to decouple mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis from FASII activity, and this adaptation is a shared metabolic feature of otherApicomplexanpathogens, includingToxoplasmaandBabesia. This discovery also highlights the ancient, fundamental role of ACP in mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis and unveils an evolutionary driving force to retain this interaction with ACP independent of its eponymous function in FASII.Significance StatementPlasmodiummalaria parasites are single-celled eukaryotes that evolved unusual metabolic adaptations. Parasites require a mitochondrion for blood-stage viability, but essential functions beyond the electron transport chain are sparsely understood. Unlike yeast and human cells, thePlasmodiummitochondrion lacks fatty acid synthesis enzymes but retains a divergent acyl carrier protein (mACP) incapable of tethering acyl groups. Nevertheless, mACP is essential for parasite viability by binding and stabilizing the core mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis complex via a divergent molecular interface lacking an acyl-pantetheine group that contrasts with other eukaryotes. This discovery unveils an essential metabolic adaptation inPlasmodiumand other human parasites that decouples mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis from fatty acid synthesis and evolved at or near the emergence ofApicomplexanparasitism.
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- 2021
10. Author response: Divergent acyl carrier protein decouples mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis from fatty acid synthesis in malaria parasites
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Paul A. Sigala, Yasaman Jami-Alahmadi, Hahnbeom Park, Jaime Sepulveda, James A. Wohlschlegel, and Seyi Falekun
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Acyl carrier protein ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,biology ,Biochemistry ,Chemistry ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Cluster (physics) ,medicine.disease ,Malaria ,Biogenesis ,Fatty acid synthesis - Published
- 2021
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11. Critical role for isoprenoids in apicoplast biogenesis by malaria parasites
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Russell P. Swift, Sean T. Prigge, Krithika Rajaram, John Alan Maschek, Amanda Mixon, Paul A. Sigala, and Megan Okada
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Plasmodium falciparum ,Isopentenyl pyrophosphate ,Protozoan Proteins ,Biology ,Apicoplasts ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Polyprenols ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Prenylation ,Organelle ,Animals ,Parasites ,Malaria, Falciparum ,Apicoplast ,ATP synthase ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Terpenes ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,chemistry ,Transfer RNA ,biology.protein ,Biogenesis - Abstract
Isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) is an essential metabolic output of the apicoplast organelle in Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites and is required for prenylation-dependent vesicular trafficking and other cellular processes. We have elucidated a critical and previously uncharacterized role for IPP in apicoplast biogenesis. Inhibiting IPP synthesis blocks apicoplast elongation and inheritance by daughter merozoites, and apicoplast biogenesis is rescued by exogenous IPP and polyprenols. Knockout of the only known isoprenoid-dependent apicoplast pathway, tRNA prenylation by MiaA, has no effect on blood-stage parasites and thus cannot explain apicoplast reliance on IPP. However, we have localized an annotated polyprenyl synthase (PPS) to the apicoplast. PPS knockdown is lethal to parasites, rescued by IPP and long- (C50) but not short-chain (≤C20) prenyl alcohols, and blocks apicoplast biogenesis, thus explaining apicoplast dependence on isoprenoid synthesis. We hypothesize that PPS synthesizes long-chain polyprenols critical for apicoplast membrane fluidity and biogenesis. This work critically expands the paradigm for isoprenoid utilization in malaria parasites and identifies a novel essential branch of apicoplast metabolism suitable for therapeutic targeting.
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- 2021
12. Doxycycline has distinct apicoplast-specific mechanisms of antimalarial activity
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Megan Okada, Ping Guo, Paul A. Sigala, and Shai-anne Nalder
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0301 basic medicine ,Drug ,Antiparasitic ,medicine.drug_class ,QH301-705.5 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Science ,Antibiotics ,030106 microbiology ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Isopentenyl pyrophosphate ,Short Report ,malaria ,metals ,Pharmacology ,P. falciparum ,Apicoplasts ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Antimalarials ,drug mechanisms ,Organelle ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,Protein translation ,Biology (General) ,media_common ,Doxycycline ,Apicoplast ,Microbiology and Infectious Disease ,apicoplast ,biology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,doxycycline ,Molecular Structure ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Medicine ,Biogenesis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Doxycycline (DOX) is a key antimalarial drug that is thought to kill Plasmodium falciparum parasites by blocking protein translation in the essential apicoplast organelle. Although parasite resistance to DOX has not emerged, clinical use is primarily limited to prophylaxis due to delayed second-cycle parasite death at 1-3 μM, the DOX concentration readily achieved in human plasma at current dosing. Slow antiparasitic activity is thought to be a fundamental limitation of DOX and other antibiotics that target apicoplast maintenance. We report that slightly higher 8-10 μM DOX concentrations kill parasites with first-cycle activity that blocks apicoplast biogenesis. This faster activity is rescued by exogenous isopentenyl pyrophosphate, an essential apicoplast product, confirming an apicoplast-specific target. Exogenous iron rescues first- but not second-cycle activity by 1 or 10 μM DOX, revealing that first-cycle activity involves a metal-dependent mechanism that is distinct from the canonical delayed-death mechanism. These results provide a new paradigm for understanding fundamental antiparasitic mechanisms of DOX and suggest the possibility of repurposing DOX as a faster-acting antimalarial at higher dosing, which remains well tolerated. Multiple mechanisms of DOX activity would be expected to limit parasite resistance.
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- 2020
13. Determination of Hydrogen Bond Structure in Water versus Aprotic Environments To Test the Relationship Between Length and Stability
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Corey W. Liu, Todd J. Martínez, Paula M. B. Piccoli, Daniel Herschlag, Eliza A. Ruben, Paul A. Sigala, Edward G. Hohenstein, and Arthur J. Schultz
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Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Molecular Structure ,Chemistry ,Hydrogen bond ,Inorganic chemistry ,Low-barrier hydrogen bond ,Water ,Hydrogen Bonding ,General Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Bond order ,Acceptor ,Catalysis ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Chemical bond ,Chemical physics ,Solvents ,Quantum Theory ,Thermodynamics ,Molecule ,Bond energy ,Macromolecule - Abstract
Hydrogen bonds profoundly influence the architecture and activity of biological macromolecules. Deep appreciation of hydrogen bond contributions to biomolecular function thus requires a detailed understanding of hydrogen bond structure and energetics and the relationship between these properties. Hydrogen bond formation energies (ΔGf) are enormously more favorable in aprotic solvents than in water, and two classes of contributing factors have been proposed to explain this energetic difference, focusing respectively on the isolated and hydrogen-bonded species: (I) water stabilizes the dissociated donor and acceptor groups much better than aprotic solvents, thereby reducing the driving force for hydrogen bond formation; and (II) water lengthens hydrogen bonds compared to aprotic environments, thereby decreasing the potential energy within the hydrogen bond. Each model has been proposed to provide a dominant contribution to ΔGf, but incisive tests that distinguish the importance of these contributions are lacking. Here we directly test the structural basis of model II. Neutron crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, and quantum mechanical calculations demonstrate that O-H···O hydrogen bonds in crystals, chloroform, acetone, and water have nearly identical lengths and very similar potential energy surfaces despite ΔGf differences8 kcal/mol across these solvents. These results rule out a substantial contribution from solvent-dependent differences in hydrogen bond structure and potential energy after association (model II) and thus support the conclusion that differences in hydrogen bond ΔGf are predominantly determined by solvent interactions with the dissociated groups (model I). These findings advance our understanding of universal hydrogen-bonding interactions and have important implications for biology and engineering.
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- 2015
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14. The Heme Biosynthesis Pathway Is Essential for Plasmodium falciparum Development in Mosquito Stage but Not in Blood Stages
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Kazutoyo Miura, Paul A. Sigala, Hangjun Ke, Carole A. Long, Michael W. Mather, Joanne M. Morrisey, Daniel E. Goldberg, Jeffrey P. Henderson, Akhil B. Vaidya, and Jan R. Crowley
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Male ,Erythrocytes ,Hemeprotein ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Heme ,Microbiology ,Biochemistry ,Cofactor ,Gene Knockout Techniques ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Anopheles ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Anopheles stephensi ,biology ,Hemozoin ,Cell Biology ,Ferrochelatase ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,5-Aminolevulinate Synthetase - Abstract
Heme is an essential cofactor for aerobic organisms. Its redox chemistry is central to a variety of biological functions mediated by hemoproteins. In blood stages, malaria parasites consume most of the hemoglobin inside the infected erythrocytes, forming nontoxic hemozoin crystals from large quantities of heme released during digestion. At the same time, the parasites possess a heme de novo biosynthetic pathway. This pathway in the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum has been considered essential and is proposed as a potential drug target. However, we successfully disrupted the first and last genes of the pathway, individually and in combination. These knock-out parasite lines, lacking 5-aminolevulinic acid synthase and/or ferrochelatase (FC), grew normally in blood-stage culture and exhibited no changes in sensitivity to heme-related antimalarial drugs. We developed a sensitive LC-MS/MS assay to monitor stable isotope incorporation into heme from its precursor 5-[(13)C4]aminolevulinic acid, and this assay confirmed that de novo heme synthesis was ablated in FC knock-out parasites. Disrupting the FC gene also caused no defects in gametocyte generation or maturation but resulted in a greater than 70% reduction in male gamete formation and completely prevented oocyst formation in female Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes. Our data demonstrate that the heme biosynthesis pathway is not essential for asexual blood-stage growth of P. falciparum parasites but is required for mosquito transmission. Drug inhibition of pathway activity is therefore unlikely to provide successful antimalarial therapy. These data also suggest the existence of a parasite mechanism for scavenging host heme to meet metabolic needs.
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- 2014
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15. In-Cell Enzymology To Probe His-Heme Ligation in Heme Oxygenase Catalysis
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Koldo Morante, Jose M. M. Caaveiro, Daniel E. Goldberg, Paul A. Sigala, and Kouhei Tsumoto
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0301 basic medicine ,Models, Molecular ,Protein Conformation ,Mutant ,Arabidopsis ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Heme ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bacterial Proteins ,Oxidoreductase ,Catalytic Domain ,Escherichia coli ,Humans ,Histidine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Biliverdin ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,Biliverdin reductase ,Biliverdine ,Synechocystis ,Catalase ,Heme oxygenase ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Heme Oxygenase (Decyclizing) ,Biocatalysis ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Heme Oxygenase-1 - Abstract
Heme oxygenase (HO) is a ubiquitous enzyme with key roles in inflammation, cell signaling, heme disposal, and iron acquisition. HO catalyzes the oxidative conversion of heme to biliverdin (BV) using a conserved histidine to coordinate the iron atom of bound heme. This His-heme interaction has been regarded as being essential for enzyme activity, because His-to-Ala mutants fail to convert heme to biliverdin in vitro. We probed a panel of proximal His mutants of cyanobacterial, human, and plant HO enzymes using a live-cell activity assay based on heterologous co-expression in Escherichia coli of each HO mutant and a fluorescent biliverdin biosensor. In contrast to in vitro studies with purified proteins, we observed that multiple HO mutants retained significant activity within the intracellular environment of bacteria. X-ray crystallographic structures of human HO1 H25R with bound heme and additional functional studies suggest that HO mutant activity inside these cells does not involve heme ligation by a proximal amino acid. Our study reveals unexpected plasticity in the active site binding interactions with heme that can support HO activity within cells, suggests important contributions by the surrounding active site environment to HO catalysis, and can guide efforts to understand the evolution and divergence of HO function.
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- 2016
16. Hydrogen Bond Coupling in the Ketosteroid Isomerase Active Site
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Dagmar Ringe, Gregory A. Petsko, Jose M. M. Caaveiro, Paul A. Sigala, and Daniel Herschlag
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Models, Molecular ,biology ,Chemistry ,Hydrogen bond ,Chemical shift ,Low-barrier hydrogen bond ,Active site ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Steroid Isomerases ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Crystallography ,Deuterium ,Catalytic Domain ,Kinetic isotope effect ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,biology.protein ,Proton NMR ,Oxyanion hole ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular - Abstract
Hydrogen bond networks are key elements of biological structure and function. Nevertheless, their structural properties are challenging to assess within complex macromolecules. Hydrogen-bonded protons are not observed in the vast majority of protein X-ray structures, and static crystallographic models provide limited information regarding the dynamical coupling within hydrogen bond networks. We have brought together 1.1 – 1.3 Å resolution X-ray crystallography, 1H NMR, site-directed mutagenesis, and deuterium isotope effects on the geometry and chemical shifts of hydrogen-bonded protons to probe the conformational coupling of hydrogen bonds donated by Y16 and D103 in the oxyanion hole of bacterial ketosteroid isomerase. Our results suggest a robust physical coupling of the equilibrium structures of these two hydrogen bonds such that a lengthening of one hydrogen bond by as little as 0.01 Å results in a shortening of the neighbor by a similar magnitude. Furthermore, the structural rearrangements detected by NMR in response to mutations within the active site hydrogen bond network can be explained on the basis of the observed coupling. The results herein elucidate fundamental structural properties of hydrogen bonds within the idiosyncratic environment of an enzyme active site and provide a foundation for future experimental and computational explorations of the role of coupled motions within hydrogen bond networks.
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- 2009
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17. Author response: Deconvoluting heme biosynthesis to target blood-stage malaria parasites
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Jan R. Crowley, Jeffrey P. Henderson, Daniel E. Goldberg, and Paul A. Sigala
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Heme biosynthesis ,Blood stage malaria ,Biology ,Microbiology - Published
- 2015
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18. Deconvoluting heme biosynthesis to target blood-stage malaria parasites
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Jeffrey P. Henderson, Daniel E. Goldberg, Jan R. Crowley, and Paul A. Sigala
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Erythrocytes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Protoporphyrins ,Photodynamic therapy ,Biochemistry ,Lactones ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Artemisinin ,Biology (General) ,Heme ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Microbiology and Infectious Disease ,0303 health sciences ,Photosensitizing Agents ,biology ,Protoporphyrin IX ,General Neuroscience ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,heme biosynthesis ,General Medicine ,Artemisinins ,3. Good health ,photodynamic therapy ,Medicine ,Research Article ,medicine.drug ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Plasmodium falciparum ,malaria ,P. falciparum ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,human ,030304 developmental biology ,Reactive oxygen species ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,E. coli ,other ,Aminolevulinic Acid ,Metabolism ,biology.organism_classification ,Biosynthetic Pathways ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,metabolism - Abstract
Heme metabolism is central to blood-stage infection by the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Parasites retain a heme biosynthesis pathway but do not require its activity during infection of heme-rich erythrocytes, where they can scavenge host heme to meet metabolic needs. Nevertheless, heme biosynthesis in parasite-infected erythrocytes can be potently stimulated by exogenous 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), resulting in accumulation of the phototoxic intermediate protoporphyrin IX (PPIX). Here we use photodynamic imaging, mass spectrometry, parasite gene disruption, and chemical probes to reveal that vestigial host enzymes in the cytoplasm of Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes contribute to ALA-stimulated heme biosynthesis and that ALA uptake depends on parasite-established permeability pathways. We show that PPIX accumulation in infected erythrocytes can be harnessed for antimalarial chemotherapy using luminol-based chemiluminescence and combinatorial stimulation by low-dose artemisinin to photoactivate PPIX to produce cytotoxic reactive oxygen. This photodynamic strategy has the advantage of exploiting host enzymes refractory to resistance-conferring mutations. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.09143.001, eLife digest Malaria is a devastating infectious disease that is caused by single-celled parasites called Plasmodium that can live inside red blood cells. Several important proteins from these parasites require a small molecule called heme in order to work. The parasites have enzymes that make heme via a series of intermediate steps. However, it remains unclear exactly how important this ‘pathway’ of enzymes is for the parasite, and whether this pathway could be targeted by drugs to treat malaria. Now Sigala et al. have used a range of genetic and biochemical approaches to better understand the production of heme molecules in Plasmodium-infected red blood cells. First, several parasite genes that encode the enzymes used to make heme molecules were deleted. Unexpectedly, these gene deletions did not affect the ability of the infected blood cells to make heme. This result suggested that the parasites do not use their own pathway to produce heme while they are growing in the bloodstream. Sigala et al. then showed that human enzymes involved in making heme, most of which are also found within the infected red blood cells, are still active. These human enzymes provide a parallel pathway that can link up with the final parasite enzyme to generate heme. Further experiments revealed that the activity of the human enzymes could be strongly stimulated by providing the pathway with one of the building blocks used to make heme. This stimulation led to the build-up of an intermediate molecule called PPIX. This intermediate molecule can kill cells when it is exposed to light—a property that is called ‘phototoxicity’. Sigala et al. showed that treating infected red blood cells with a new combination of non-toxic chemicals that emit light can activate PPIX in the bloodstream and can selectively kill the malaria parasites while leaving uninfected cells intact. These findings suggest a new treatment that could be effective against blood-stage malaria. Furthermore, the parasite will be unable to easily mutate to avoid the effects of this treatment because it relies on human proteins that are already made. Future work is now needed to optimize the dosage and the combination of drugs that could provide such a treatment. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.09143.002
- Published
- 2015
19. Distinct interaction modes of an AKAP bound to two regulatory subunit isoforms of protein kinase A revealed by amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange
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Yoshitomo Hamuro, Virgil L. Woods, Patricia A. Jennings, David D. Stranz, Jack S. Kim, Rosa Fayos, Lora L. Burns-Hamuro, Susan S. Taylor, and Paul A. Sigala
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Models, Molecular ,Stereochemistry ,Protein subunit ,Molecular Sequence Data ,A Kinase Anchor Proteins ,Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Type II ,Plasma protein binding ,Ligands ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Mice ,Protein structure ,Animals ,Protein Isoforms ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,Binding selectivity ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Chemistry ,Ligand ,Deuterium Exchange Measurement ,Membrane Proteins ,Amides ,Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Protein Subunits ,Crystallography ,Docking (molecular) ,Hydrogen–deuterium exchange ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The structure of an AKAP docked to the dimerization/docking (D/D) domain of the type II (RIIalpha) isoform of protein kinase A (PKA) has been well characterized, but there currently is no detailed structural information of an AKAP docked to the type I (RIalpha) isoform. Dual-specific AKAP2 (D-AKAP2) binds in the nanomolar range to both isoforms and provided us with an opportunity to characterize the isoform-selective nature of AKAP binding using a common docked ligand. Hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange combined with mass spectrometry (DXMS) was used to probe backbone structural changes of an alpha-helical A-kinase binding (AKB) motif from D-AKAP2 docked to both RIalpha and RIIalpha D/D domains. The region of protection upon complex formation and the magnitude of protection from H/D exchange were determined for both interacting partners in each complex. The backbone of the AKB ligand was more protected when bound to RIalpha compared to RIIalpha, suggesting an increased helical stabilization of the docked AKB ligand. This combined with a broader region of backbone protection induced by the AKAP on the docking surface of RIalpha indicated that there were more binding constraints for the AKB ligand when bound to RIalpha. This was in contrast to RIIalpha, which has a preformed, localized binding surface. These distinct modes of AKAP binding may contribute to the more discriminating nature of the RIalpha AKAP-docking surface. DXMS provides valuable structural information for understanding binding specificity in the absence of a high-resolution structure, and can readily be applied to other protein-ligand and protein-protein interactions.
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- 2005
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20. The peculiarities and paradoxes of Plasmodium heme metabolism
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Daniel E. Goldberg and Paul A. Sigala
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Plasmodium ,Hemozoin ,Vacuole ,Hemoglobin catabolism ,Heme ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Cofactor ,Cell biology ,Malaria ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biosynthesis ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,parasitic diseases ,Heme metabolism ,biology.protein ,Animals ,Humans - Abstract
For over a century, heme metabolism has been recognized to play a central role during intraerythrocytic infection by Plasmodium parasites, the causative agent of malaria. Parasites liberate vast quantities of potentially cytotoxic heme as a by-product of hemoglobin catabolism within the digestive vacuole, where heme is predominantly sequestered as inert crystalline hemozoin. Plasmodium spp. also utilize heme as a metabolic cofactor. Despite access to abundant host-derived heme, parasites paradoxically maintain a biosynthetic pathway. This pathway has been assumed to produce the heme incorporated into mitochondrial cytochromes that support electron transport. In this review, we assess our current understanding of the love-hate relationship between Plasmodium parasites and heme, we discuss recent studies that clarify several long-standing riddles about heme production and utilization by parasites, and we consider remaining challenges and opportunities for understanding and targeting heme metabolism within parasites.
- Published
- 2014
21. Decomposition of Vibrational Shifts of Nitriles into Electrostatic and Hydrogen-Bonding Effects
- Author
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Steven G. Boxer, Paul A. Sigala, Aaron T. Fafarman, and Daniel Herschlag
- Subjects
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Infrared ,Static Electricity ,Analytical chemistry ,Steroid Isomerases ,Vibration ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Catalysis ,symbols.namesake ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Catalytic Domain ,Electric field ,Nitriles ,Pseudomonas putida ,Hydrogen bond ,Chemistry ,Chemical shift ,fungi ,Solvatochromism ,food and beverages ,Hydrogen Bonding ,General Chemistry ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Carbon-13 NMR ,Stark effect ,Chemical physics ,symbols - Abstract
Infrared (IR) band shifts of isolated vibrational transitions can serve as quantitative and directional probes of local electrostatic fields, due to the vibrational Stark effect. However, departures from the Stark model can arise when the probe participates in specific, chemical interactions, such as direct hydrogen bonding. We present a method to identify and correct for these departures based on comparison of (13)C NMR chemical shifts and IR frequencies each calibrated in turn by a solvatochromic model. We demonstrate how the tandem use of these experimental observables can be applied to a thiocyanate-modified protein, ketosteroid isomerase, and show, by comparison to structural models, that changes in electrostatic field can be measured within the complex protein environment even in the background of direct hydrogen bonding to the probe.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Quantitative dissection of hydrogen bond-mediated proton transfer in the ketosteroid isomerase active site
- Author
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Jose M. M. Caaveiro, Timothy D. Fenn, Aaron T. Fafarman, Dagmar Ringe, Daniel Herschlag, Brandon Pybus, Steven G. Boxer, Paul A. Sigala, Gregory A. Petsko, Stephen D. Fried, and Jason P. Schwans
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Stereochemistry ,Steroid Isomerases ,Isomerase ,Ion ,Enzyme catalysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Catalytic Domain ,Ketosteroid ,Ionization ,Quantitative Biology::Biomolecules ,Ion Transport ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Pseudomonas putida ,Hydrogen bond ,Active site ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Ketosteroids ,Crystallography ,PNAS Plus ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Proton affinity ,Protons - Abstract
Hydrogen bond networks are key elements of protein structure and function but have been challenging to study within the complex protein environment. We have carried out in-depth interrogations of the proton transfer equilibrium within a hydrogen bond network formed to bound phenols in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase. We systematically varied the proton affinity of the phenol using differing electron-withdrawing substituents and incorporated site-specific NMR and IR probes to quantitatively map the proton and charge rearrangements within the network that accompany incremental increases in phenol proton affinity. The observed ionization changes were accurately described by a simple equilibrium proton transfer model that strongly suggests the intrinsic proton affinity of one of the Tyr residues in the network, Tyr16, does not remain constant but rather systematically increases due to weakening of the phenol-Tyr16 anion hydrogen bond with increasing phenol proton affinity. Using vibrational Stark spectroscopy, we quantified the electrostatic field changes within the surrounding active site that accompany these rearrangements within the network. We were able to model these changes accurately using continuum electrostatic calculations, suggesting a high degree of conformational restriction within the protein matrix. Our study affords direct insight into the physical and energetic properties of a hydrogen bond network within a protein interior and provides an example of a highly controlled system with minimal conformational rearrangements in which the observed physical changes can be accurately modeled by theoretical calculations.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Quantitative, directional measurement of electric field heterogeneity in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase
- Author
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Paul A. Sigala, Aaron T. Fafarman, Daniel Herschlag, Steven G. Boxer, Timothy D. Fenn, and Jason P. Schwans
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Static Electricity ,Analytical chemistry ,Steroid Isomerases ,Isomerase ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Ligands ,Vibration ,Absorption ,Enzyme catalysis ,Catalytic Domain ,Ionization ,Nitriles ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,Static electricity ,Ions ,Aspartic Acid ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Pseudomonas putida ,Chemistry ,Titrimetry ,Active site ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Carbon-13 NMR ,Electrostatics ,PNAS Plus ,Chemical physics ,Molecular Probes ,Biocatalysis ,biology.protein ,Tyrosine ,Mutant Proteins ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet - Abstract
Understanding the electrostatic forces and features within highly heterogeneous, anisotropic, and chemically complex enzyme active sites and their connection to biological catalysis remains a longstanding challenge, in part due to the paucity of incisive experimental probes of electrostatic properties within proteins. To quantitatively assess the landscape of electrostatic fields at discrete locations and orientations within an enzyme active site, we have incorporated site-specific thiocyanate vibrational probes into multiple positions within bacterial ketosteroid isomerase. A battery of X-ray crystallographic, vibrational Stark spectroscopy, and NMR studies revealed electrostatic field heterogeneity of 8 MV/cm between active site probe locations and widely differing sensitivities of discrete probes to common electrostatic perturbations from mutation, ligand binding, and pH changes. Electrostatic calculations based on active site ionization states assigned by literature precedent and computational pK a prediction were unable to quantitatively account for the observed vibrational band shifts. However, electrostatic models of the D40N mutant gave qualitative agreement with the observed vibrational effects when an unusual ionization of an active site tyrosine with a pK a near 7 was included. UV-absorbance and 13 C NMR experiments confirmed the presence of a tyrosinate in the active site, in agreement with electrostatic models. This work provides the most direct measure of the heterogeneous and anisotropic nature of the electrostatic environment within an enzyme active site, and these measurements provide incisive benchmarks for further developing accurate computational models and a foundation for future tests of electrostatics in enzymatic catalysis.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Hydrogen bonding in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase: electronic inductive effects and hydrogen bond coupling
- Author
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Sharon Hammes-Schiffer, Daniel Herschlag, Philip Hanoian, and Paul A. Sigala
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Proton ,Low-barrier hydrogen bond ,Protonation ,Electrons ,Steroid Isomerases ,Isomerase ,Photochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Isomerism ,Ketosteroid ,Catalytic Domain ,Hydroxybenzoates ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Comamonas testosteroni ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular ,biology ,Hydrogen bond ,Pseudomonas putida ,Chemical shift ,Active site ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Ketosteroids ,Crystallography ,chemistry ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Quantum Theory ,Protons - Abstract
Computational studies are performed to analyze the physical properties of hydrogen bonds donated by Tyr16 and Asp103 to a series of substituted phenolate inhibitors bound in the active site of ketosteroid isomerase (KSI). As the solution pK(a) of the phenolate increases, these hydrogen bond distances decrease, the associated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) chemical shifts increase, and the fraction of protonated inhibitor increases, in agreement with prior experiments. The quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations provide insight into the electronic inductive effects along the hydrogen bonding network that includes Tyr16, Tyr57, and Tyr32, as well as insight into hydrogen bond coupling in the active site. The calculations predict that the most-downfield NMR chemical shift observed experimentally corresponds to the Tyr16-phenolate hydrogen bond and that Tyr16 is the proton donor when a bound naphtholate inhibitor is observed to be protonated in electronic absorption experiments. According to these calculations, the electronic inductive effects along the hydrogen bonding network of tyrosines cause the Tyr16 hydroxyl to be more acidic than the Asp103 carboxylic acid moiety, which is immersed in a relatively nonpolar environment. When one of the distal tyrosine residues in the network is mutated to phenylalanine, thereby diminishing this inductive effect, the Tyr16-phenolate hydrogen bond becomes longer and the Asp103-phenolate hydrogen bond shorter, as observed in NMR experiments. Furthermore, the calculations suggest that the differences in the experimental NMR data and electronic absorption spectra for pKSI and tKSI, two homologous bacterial forms of the enzyme, are due predominantly to the third tyrosine that is present in the hydrogen bonding network of pKSI but not tKSI. These studies also provide experimentally testable predictions about the impact of mutating the distal tyrosine residues in this hydrogen bonding network on the NMR chemical shifts and electronic absorption spectra.
- Published
- 2010
25. Dissecting the paradoxical effects of hydrogen bond mutations in the ketosteroid isomerase oxyanion hole
- Author
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Timothy D. Fenn, Paul A. Sigala, Daniel Herschlag, and Daniel A. Kraut
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Stereochemistry ,Mutant ,Static Electricity ,Steroid Isomerases ,Isomerase ,medicine.disease_cause ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ketosteroid ,Catalytic Domain ,medicine ,Comamonas testosteroni ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular ,Equilenin ,Mutation ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,Hydrogen bond ,Pseudomonas putida ,Mutagenesis ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Biological Sciences ,Ketosteroids ,Recombinant Proteins ,Kinetics ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Oxyanion hole ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The catalytic importance of enzyme active-site interactions is frequently assessed by mutating specific residues and measuring the resulting rate reductions. This approach has been used in bacterial ketosteroid isomerase to probe the energetic importance of active-site hydrogen bonds donated to the dienolate reaction intermediate. The conservative Tyr16Phe mutation impairs catalysis by 10 5 -fold, far larger than the effects of hydrogen bond mutations in other enzymes. However, the less-conservative Tyr16Ser mutation, which also perturbs the Tyr16 hydrogen bond, results in a less-severe 10 2 -fold rate reduction. To understand the paradoxical effects of these mutations and clarify the energetic importance of the Tyr16 hydrogen bond, we have determined the 1.6-Å resolution x-ray structure of the intermediate analogue, equilenin, bound to the Tyr16Ser mutant and measured the rate effects of mutating Tyr16 to Ser, Thr, Ala, and Gly. The nearly identical 200-fold rate reductions of these mutations, together with the 6.4-Å distance observed between the Ser16 hydroxyl and equilenin oxygens in the x-ray structure, strongly suggest that the more moderate rate effect of this mutant is not due to maintenance of a hydrogen bond from Ser at position 16. These results, additional spectroscopic observations, and prior structural studies suggest that the Tyr16Phe mutation results in unfavorable interactions with the dienolate intermediate beyond loss of a hydrogen bond, thereby exaggerating the apparent energetic benefit of the Tyr16 hydrogen bond relative to the solution reaction. These results underscore the complex energetics of hydrogen bonding interactions and site-directed mutagenesis experiments.
- Published
- 2010
26. Hydrogen bond dynamics in the active site of photoactive yellow protein
- Author
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Paul A. Sigala, Daniel Herschlag, and Mark A. Tsuchida
- Subjects
Photoactive yellow protein ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Hydrogen bond ,Low-barrier hydrogen bond ,Active site ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Halorhodospira halophila ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Chromophore ,Biological Sciences ,Photochemistry ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Photoreceptors, Microbial ,Oxygen ,Crystallography ,chemistry ,Bacterial Proteins ,Biological structure ,Catalytic Domain ,Kinetic isotope effect ,biology.protein ,Escherichia coli ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular - Abstract
Hydrogen bonds play major roles in biological structure and function. Nonetheless, hydrogen-bonded protons are not typically observed by X-ray crystallography, and most structural studies provide limited insight into the conformational plasticity of individual hydrogen bonds or the dynamical coupling present within hydrogen bond networks. We report the NMR detection of the hydrogen-bonded protons donated by Tyr-42 and Glu-46 to the chromophore oxygen in the active site of the bacterial photoreceptor, photoactive yellow protein (PYP). We have used the NMR resonances for these hydrogen bonds to probe their conformational properties and ability to rearrange in response to nearby electronic perturbation. The detection of geometric isotope effects transmitted between the Tyr-42 and Glu-46 hydrogen bonds provides strong evidence for robust coupling of their equilibrium conformations. Incorporation of a modified chromophore containing an electron-withdrawing cyano group to delocalize negative charge from the chromophore oxygen, analogous to the electronic rearrangement detected upon photon absorption, results in a lengthening of the Tyr-42 and Glu-46 hydrogen bonds and an attenuated hydrogen bond coupling. The results herein elucidate fundamental properties of hydrogen bonds within the complex environment of a protein interior. Furthermore, the robust conformational coupling and plasticity of hydrogen bonds observed in the PYP active site may facilitate the larger-scale dynamical coupling and signal transduction inherent to the biological function that PYP has evolved to carry out and may provide a model for other coupled dynamic systems.
- Published
- 2009
27. The Diversity of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
- Author
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Viktor Yuryevich Alekseyev, Ronald W. Davis, Barbara J. Cade-Menun, Chaitan Khosla, Joseph D. Puglisi, Paul A. Sigala, Daniel Herschlag, Jonathan F. Stebbins, Luca Varani, Jeffrey R. Allwardt, Corey W. Liu, Daniel A. Kraut, Lin-Shu Du, Qing Li, Alexander J. Bankovich, Brian Null, and K. Christopher Garcia
- Subjects
Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Chemistry ,Transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Fluorine-19 NMR ,Nuclear magnetic resonance crystallography ,Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy - Abstract
The discovery of the physical phenomenon of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) in 1946 gave rise to the spectroscopic technique that has become a remarkably versatile research tool. One could oversimplify NMR spectros-copy by categorizing it into the two broad applications of structure eluci-dation of molecules (associated with chemistry and biology) and imaging (associated with medicine). But, this certainly does not do NMR spectros-copy justice in demonstrating its general acceptance and utilization across the sciences. This manuscript is not an effort to present an exhaustive, or even partial review of NMR spectroscopy applications, but rather to pro-vide a glimpse at the wide-ranging uses of NMR spectroscopy found within the confines of a single magnetic resonance research facility, the Stanford Magnetic Resonance Laboratory. Included here are summaries of projects involving protein structure determination, mapping of intermolecular inter-actions, exploring fundamental biological mechanisms, following compound cycling in the environmental, analysis of synthetic solid compounds, and microimaging of a model organism.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Testing geometrical discrimination within an enzyme active site: constrained hydrogen bonding in the ketosteroid isomerase oxyanion hole
- Author
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Eliza A. Ruben, Gregory A. Petsko, Daniel A. Kraut, Dagmar Ringe, Jose M. M. Caaveiro, Daniel Herschlag, Paul A. Sigala, and Brandon Pybus
- Subjects
Anions ,Models, Molecular ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Static Electricity ,Steroid Isomerases ,Isomerase ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Ligands ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,Article ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Catalytic Domain ,Molecule ,Binding site ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Molecular Structure ,Chemistry ,Pseudomonas putida ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Active site ,Hydrogen Bonding ,General Chemistry ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Transition state ,Oxygen ,Crystallography ,biology.protein ,Oxyanion hole ,Protons ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Enzymes are classically proposed to accelerate reactions by binding substrates within active-site environments that are structurally preorganized to optimize binding interactions with reaction transition states rather than ground states. This is a remarkably formidable task considering the limited 0.1-1 A scale of most substrate rearrangements. The flexibility of active-site functional groups along the coordinate of substrate rearrangement, the distance scale on which enzymes can distinguish structural rearrangement, and the energetic significance of discrimination on that scale remain open questions that are fundamental to a basic physical understanding of enzyme active sites and catalysis. We bring together 1.2-1.5 A resolution X-ray crystallography, (1)H and (19)F NMR spectroscopy, quantum mechanical calculations, and transition-state analogue binding measurements to test the distance scale on which noncovalent forces can constrain the structural relaxation or translation of side chains and ligands along a specific coordinate and the energetic consequences of such geometric constraints within the active site of bacterial ketosteroid isomerase (KSI). Our results strongly suggest that packing and binding interactions within the KSI active site can constrain local side-chain reorientation and prevent hydrogen bond shortening by 0.1 A or less. Further, this constraint has substantial energetic effects on ligand binding and stabilization of negative charge within the oxyanion hole. These results provide evidence that subtle geometric effects, indistinguishable in most X-ray crystallographic structures, can have significant energetic consequences and highlight the importance of using synergistic experimental approaches to dissect enzyme function.
- Published
- 2008
29. Do Ligand Binding and Solvent Exclusion Alter the Electrostatic Character within the Oxyanion Hole of an Enzymatic Active Site?
- Author
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Patrick E. Bogard, Steven G. Boxer, Paul A. Sigala, Aaron T. Fafarman, and Daniel Herschlag
- Subjects
Anions ,Stereochemistry ,Static Electricity ,Steroid Isomerases ,Oxyanion ,Ligands ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Catalysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Ketosteroid ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,Static electricity ,Binding site ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Thiocyanate ,Pseudomonas putida ,Active site ,General Chemistry ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Oxygen ,Kinetics ,Crystallography ,chemistry ,Solvents ,biology.protein ,Oxyanion hole ,Thiocyanates - Abstract
We report the site-specific incorporation of a thiocyanate vibrational probe into the active site oxyanion hole of ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) to test the effect of hydrophobic steroid binding and solvent exclusion on the local electrostatic environment at this position. While binding of an uncharged ground state steroid analog shifts the observed –CN vibrational frequency by +0.4 cm−1 relative to unliganded KSI, binding of an intermediate steroid analog containing localized negative charge results in a +2.8 cm−1 shift. Based on a Stark tuning rate of 0.7 cm−1/(MV/cm), this shift indicates a fivefold larger change in the projection of the local electric field along the –CN bond in the presence of the charged ligand. Binding of a single ring phenolate with oxyanion charge localization equivalent to the intermediate steroid analog but lacking distal hydrocarbon rings results in an identical –CN peak shift. We conclude that solvent exclusion and replacement by hydrophobic steroid rings negligibly alter the electrostatic environment within the KSI oxyanion hole. Development of localized negative charge analogous to that of the dienolate intermediate during steroid isomerization dramatically increases the magnitude of the local electric field. This increase reflects field contributions from the localized negative charge itself as well as possible increased ordering of active site dipoles in response to charge localization.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. What Governs Enzyme Activity? For One Enzyme, Charge Contributes Only Weakly
- Author
-
Gregory A. Petsko, Daniel A. Kraut, Dagmar Ringe, Daniel Herschlag, Paul A. Sigala, Corey W. Liu, and Brandon Pybus
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Steroid Isomerases ,Oxyanion ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Molecular Biology/Structural Biology ,Biochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Substrate Specificity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hydroxybenzoates ,Biology (General) ,Comamonas testosteroni ,0303 health sciences ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,Hydrogen bond ,General Neuroscience ,Transition state ,Solutions ,In Vitro ,Synopsis ,Oxyanion hole ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Research Article ,Anions ,QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Static Electricity ,Biophysics ,010402 general chemistry ,Catalysis ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Enzyme catalysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Molecule ,030304 developmental biology ,Binding Sites ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Pseudomonas putida ,Active site ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Carbon-Carbon Double Bond Isomerases ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,0104 chemical sciences ,Oxygen ,Crystallography ,chemistry ,biology.protein - Abstract
A longstanding proposal in enzymology is that enzymes are electrostatically and geometrically complementary to the transition states of the reactions they catalyze and that this complementarity contributes to catalysis. Experimental evaluation of this contribution, however, has been difficult. We have systematically dissected the potential contribution to catalysis from electrostatic complementarity in ketosteroid isomerase. Phenolates, analogs of the transition state and reaction intermediate, bind and accept two hydrogen bonds in an active site oxyanion hole. The binding of substituted phenolates of constant molecular shape but increasing p K a models the charge accumulation in the oxyanion hole during the enzymatic reaction. As charge localization increases, the NMR chemical shifts of protons involved in oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds increase by 0.50–0.76 ppm/p K a unit, suggesting a bond shortening of ˜0.02 Å/p K a unit. Nevertheless, there is little change in binding affinity across a series of substituted phenolates (ΔΔG = −0.2 kcal/mol/p K a unit). The small effect of increased charge localization on affinity occurs despite the shortening of the hydrogen bonds and a large favorable change in binding enthalpy (ΔΔH = −2.0 kcal/mol/p K a unit). This shallow dependence of binding affinity suggests that electrostatic complementarity in the oxyanion hole makes at most a modest contribution to catalysis of ˜300-fold. We propose that geometrical complementarity between the oxyanion hole hydrogen-bond donors and the transition state oxyanion provides a significant catalytic contribution, and suggest that KSI, like other enzymes, achieves its catalytic prowess through a combination of modest contributions from several mechanisms rather than from a single dominant contribution., Enzymatic reactions require exquisitely detailed molecular interactions. Here the authors show that geometric complementarity is likely more important than electrostatic charge in contributing to the binding necessary for catalytic reactions.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Critical role for isoprenoids in apicoplast biogenesis by malaria parasites
- Author
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Megan Okada, Krithika Rajaram, Russell P Swift, Amanda Mixon, John Alan Maschek, Sean T Prigge, and Paul A Sigala
- Subjects
malaria ,isoprenoids ,apicoplast ,organelle biogenesis ,polyprenol synthase ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) is an essential metabolic output of the apicoplast organelle in Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites and is required for prenylation-dependent vesicular trafficking and other cellular processes. We have elucidated a critical and previously uncharacterized role for IPP in apicoplast biogenesis. Inhibiting IPP synthesis blocks apicoplast elongation and inheritance by daughter merozoites, and apicoplast biogenesis is rescued by exogenous IPP and polyprenols. Knockout of the only known isoprenoid-dependent apicoplast pathway, tRNA prenylation by MiaA, has no effect on blood-stage parasites and thus cannot explain apicoplast reliance on IPP. However, we have localized an annotated polyprenyl synthase (PPS) to the apicoplast. PPS knockdown is lethal to parasites, rescued by IPP and long- (C50) but not short-chain (≤C20) prenyl alcohols, and blocks apicoplast biogenesis, thus explaining apicoplast dependence on isoprenoid synthesis. We hypothesize that PPS synthesizes long-chain polyprenols critical for apicoplast membrane fluidity and biogenesis. This work critically expands the paradigm for isoprenoid utilization in malaria parasites and identifies a novel essential branch of apicoplast metabolism suitable for therapeutic targeting.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Divergent acyl carrier protein decouples mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis from fatty acid synthesis in malaria parasites
- Author
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Seyi Falekun, Jaime Sepulveda, Yasaman Jami-Alahmadi, Hahnbeom Park, James A Wohlschlegel, and Paul A Sigala
- Subjects
malaria ,organelle adaptation ,mitochondria ,acyl carrier protein ,Fe-S cluster synthesis ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Most eukaryotic cells retain a mitochondrial fatty acid synthesis (FASII) pathway whose acyl carrier protein (mACP) and 4-phosphopantetheine (Ppant) prosthetic group provide a soluble scaffold for acyl chain synthesis and biochemically couple FASII activity to mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) assembly and Fe-S cluster biogenesis. In contrast, the mitochondrion of Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites lacks FASII enzymes yet curiously retains a divergent mACP lacking a Ppant group. We report that ligand-dependent knockdown of mACP is lethal to parasites, indicating an essential FASII-independent function. Decyl-ubiquinone rescues parasites temporarily from death, suggesting a dominant dysfunction of the mitochondrial ETC. Biochemical studies reveal that Plasmodium mACP binds and stabilizes the Isd11-Nfs1 complex required for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis, despite lacking the Ppant group required for this association in other eukaryotes, and knockdown of parasite mACP causes loss of Nfs1 and the Rieske Fe-S protein in ETC complex III. This work reveals that Plasmodium parasites have evolved to decouple mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis from FASII activity, and this adaptation is a shared metabolic feature of other apicomplexan pathogens, including Toxoplasma and Babesia. This discovery unveils an evolutionary driving force to retain interaction of mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis with ACP independent of its eponymous function in FASII.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Deconvoluting heme biosynthesis to target blood-stage malaria parasites
- Author
-
Paul A Sigala, Jan R Crowley, Jeffrey P Henderson, and Daniel E Goldberg
- Subjects
P. falciparum ,heme biosynthesis ,malaria ,metabolism ,photodynamic therapy ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Heme metabolism is central to blood-stage infection by the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Parasites retain a heme biosynthesis pathway but do not require its activity during infection of heme-rich erythrocytes, where they can scavenge host heme to meet metabolic needs. Nevertheless, heme biosynthesis in parasite-infected erythrocytes can be potently stimulated by exogenous 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), resulting in accumulation of the phototoxic intermediate protoporphyrin IX (PPIX). Here we use photodynamic imaging, mass spectrometry, parasite gene disruption, and chemical probes to reveal that vestigial host enzymes in the cytoplasm of Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes contribute to ALA-stimulated heme biosynthesis and that ALA uptake depends on parasite-established permeability pathways. We show that PPIX accumulation in infected erythrocytes can be harnessed for antimalarial chemotherapy using luminol-based chemiluminescence and combinatorial stimulation by low-dose artemisinin to photoactivate PPIX to produce cytotoxic reactive oxygen. This photodynamic strategy has the advantage of exploiting host enzymes refractory to resistance-conferring mutations.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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