Research Unit in Bioinformatics (RUBi), Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Rhodes University, P.O. Box 94, Grahamstown, 6140, South Africa.
Malar J. 2019 May 3;18(1):159. doi: 10.1186/s12936-019-2790-2.
Falcipains are major cysteine proteases of Plasmodium falciparum involved in haemoglobin degradation and remain attractive anti-malarial drug targets. Several inhibitors against these proteases have been identified, yet none of them has been approved for malaria treatment. Other Plasmodium species also possess highly homologous proteins to falcipains. For selective therapeutic targeting, identification of sequence and structure differences with homologous human cathepsins is necessary. The substrate processing activity of these proteins is tightly controlled via a prodomain segment occluding the active site which is chopped under low pH conditions exposing the catalytic site. Current work characterizes these proteases to identify residues mediating the prodomain regulatory function for the design of peptide based anti-malarial inhibitors.
Sequence and structure variations between prodomain regions of plasmodial proteins and human cathepsins were determined using in silico approaches. Additionally, evolutionary clustering of these proteins was evaluated using phylogenetic analysis. High quality partial zymogen protein structures were modelled using homology modelling and residue interaction analysis performed between the prodomain segment and mature domain to identify key interacting residues between these two domains. The resulting information was used to determine short peptide sequences which could mimic the inherent regulatory function of the prodomain regions. Through flexible docking, the binding affinity of proposed peptides on the proteins studied was evaluated.
Sequence, evolutionary and motif analyses showed important differences between plasmodial and human proteins. Residue interaction analysis identified important residues crucial for maintaining prodomain integrity across the different proteins as well as the pro-segment responsible for inhibitory mechanism. Binding affinity of suggested peptides was highly dependent on their residue composition and length.
Despite the conserved structural and catalytic mechanism between human cathepsins and plasmodial proteases, current work revealed significant differences between the two protein groups which may provide valuable information for selective anti-malarial inhibitor development. Part of this study aimed to design peptide inhibitors based on endogenous inhibitory portions of protease prodomains as a novel aspect. Even though peptide inhibitors may not be practical solutions to malaria at this stage, the approach followed and results offer a promising means to find new malarial inhibitors.
裂殖体蛋白酶是恶性疟原虫(Plasmodium falciparum)中主要的半胱氨酸蛋白酶,参与血红蛋白降解,仍然是有吸引力的抗疟药物靶点。已经鉴定出几种针对这些蛋白酶的抑制剂,但没有一种被批准用于疟疾治疗。其他疟原虫物种也具有与裂殖体蛋白酶高度同源的蛋白质。为了进行选择性的治疗靶向,有必要识别与同源人组织蛋白酶的序列和结构差异。这些蛋白质的底物加工活性通过一个封闭活性位点的前导肽段来严格控制,该肽段在低 pH 条件下被切断,暴露催化位点。目前的工作对这些蛋白酶进行了特征描述,以确定介导前导肽调节功能的残基,用于设计基于肽的抗疟抑制剂。
使用计算机方法确定裂殖体蛋白和人组织蛋白酶前导区之间的序列和结构差异。此外,还通过系统发育分析评估了这些蛋白质的进化聚类。使用同源建模对高质量的部分酶原蛋白结构进行建模,并在前导肽段和成熟结构域之间进行残基相互作用分析,以确定这两个结构域之间的关键相互作用残基。所得信息用于确定可以模拟前导区固有调节功能的短肽序列。通过柔性对接,评估了所提出的肽在研究蛋白上的结合亲和力。
序列、进化和模体分析表明裂殖体和人蛋白之间存在重要差异。残基相互作用分析确定了维持不同蛋白前导区完整性以及负责抑制机制的前导肽段的关键残基。所提出的肽的结合亲和力高度依赖于它们的残基组成和长度。
尽管人类组织蛋白酶和裂殖体蛋白酶之间具有保守的结构和催化机制,但目前的工作揭示了这两种蛋白质组之间的显著差异,这可能为选择性抗疟抑制剂的开发提供有价值的信息。本研究的一部分旨在基于蛋白酶前导区的内源性抑制部分设计肽抑制剂,这是一个新的方面。尽管肽抑制剂在现阶段可能不是治疗疟疾的实际解决方案,但所采用的方法和结果提供了寻找新的疟疾抑制剂的有希望的手段。