Buscaglia Carlos A, Hol Wim G J, Nussenzweig Victor, Cardozo Timothy
Michael Heidelberg Division of Pathology of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pathology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, USA.
Proteins. 2007 Feb 15;66(3):528-37. doi: 10.1002/prot.21266.
A complex molecular motor empowers substrate-dependent motility and host cell invasion in malaria parasites. The interaction between aldolase and the transmembrane adhesin thrombospondin-related anonymous protein (TRAP) transduces the motor force across the parasite surface. Here, we analyzed this interaction by using state-of-the-art flexible docking. Besides algorithms to account for induced fit in the side-chains of the Plasmodium falciparum aldolase (PfAldo) structure, we used additional in silico receptors modeled upon crystallographic structures of evolutionarily related aldolases to incorporate enzyme backbone flexibility, and to overcome structure inaccuracies due to the relatively low resolution (3.0 A) of the genuine PfAldo structure. Our results indicate that, in spite of multiple intermolecular contacts, only the six C-terminal residues of the TRAP cytoplasmic tail bind in an ordered manner to PfAldo. This portion of TRAP targets the PfAldo active site, with its n-1 Trp residue, which is essential for this interaction, buried within the PfAldo catalytic pocket. Docking of a TRAP peptide bearing a Trp to Ala mutation rendered the lower energy configurations either bound weakly outside the active site or not bound to PfAldo at all. The position of the bound TRAP peptide, and particularly the close proximity between the carbonyl of its n-2 Asp residue and the experimentally determined position of the phosphate-6 group of fructose 1,6-phosphate bound to mammalian aldolases, predicts an inhibitory effect of TRAP on catalysis. Enzymatic and TRAP-binding assays using mutant PfAldo molecules strongly support the overall structural model. These results might provide the initial framework for the identification of novel antiparasitic compounds.
一种复杂的分子马达赋予疟原虫依赖底物的运动能力和宿主细胞入侵能力。醛缩酶与跨膜粘附素血小板反应蛋白相关无名蛋白(TRAP)之间的相互作用将马达力传递过寄生虫表面。在此,我们使用最先进的柔性对接分析了这种相互作用。除了考虑恶性疟原虫醛缩酶(PfAldo)结构侧链诱导契合的算法外,我们还使用了基于进化相关醛缩酶晶体结构建模的额外计算机受体,以纳入酶主链的灵活性,并克服由于真实PfAldo结构相对较低分辨率(3.0埃)导致的结构不准确问题。我们的结果表明,尽管存在多个分子间接触,但只有TRAP细胞质尾的六个C末端残基以有序方式与PfAldo结合。TRAP的这一部分靶向PfAldo活性位点,其第n - 1位色氨酸残基对这种相互作用至关重要,埋在PfAldo催化口袋内。带有色氨酸到丙氨酸突变的TRAP肽对接后,较低能量构型要么在活性位点外弱结合,要么根本不与PfAldo结合。结合的TRAP肽的位置,特别是其第n - 2位天冬氨酸残基的羰基与结合到哺乳动物醛缩酶上的1,6 - 磷酸果糖磷酸 - 6基团的实验确定位置之间的紧密接近,预测了TRAP对催化的抑制作用。使用突变PfAldo分子的酶促和TRAP结合测定强烈支持整体结构模型。这些结果可能为鉴定新型抗寄生虫化合物提供初步框架。