Back to Search Start Over

Hemoglobin Cleavage Site-Specificity of the Plasmodium falciparum Cysteine Proteases Falcipain-2 and Falcipain-3

Authors :
Philip J. Rosenthal
Iain D. Kerr
Richard K. Niles
Markus Hardt
Jiri Gut
Jennifer Legac
Charles S. Craik
Shoba Subramanian
Eric B. Johansen
Youngchool Choe
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 4, Iss 4, p e5156 (2009), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2009.

Abstract

The Plasmodium falciparum cysteine proteases falcipain-2 and falcipain-3 degrade host hemoglobin to provide free amino acids for parasite protein synthesis. Hemoglobin hydrolysis has been described as an ordered process initiated by aspartic proteases, but cysteine protease inhibitors completely block the process, suggesting that cysteine proteases can also initiate hemoglobin hydrolysis. To characterize the specific roles of falcipains, we used three approaches. First, using random P(1) - P(4) amino acid substrate libraries, falcipain-2 and falcipain-3 demonstrated strong preference for cleavage sites with Leu at the P(2) position. Second, with overlapping peptides spanning alpha and beta globin and proteolysis-dependent (18)O labeling, hydrolysis was seen at many cleavage sites. Third, with intact hemoglobin, numerous cleavage products were identified. Our results suggest that hemoglobin hydrolysis by malaria parasites is not a highly ordered process, but rather proceeds with rapid cleavage by falcipains at multiple sites. However, falcipain-2 and falcipain-3 show strong specificity for P(2) Leu in small peptide substrates, in agreement with the specificity in optimized small molecule inhibitors that was identified previously. These results are consistent with a principal role of falcipain-2 and falcipain-3 in the hydrolysis of hemoglobin by P. falciparum and with the possibility of developing small molecule inhibitors with optimized specificity as antimalarial agents.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3c1b9cfa7aed88d06ed992393f1b1280