4.6 Article

Distribution and Biochemical Properties of an M1-family Aminopeptidase in Plasmodium falciparum Indicate a Role in Vacuolar Hemoglobin Catabolism

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 286, Issue 31, Pages 27255-27265

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.225318

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI077638]

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Aminopeptidases catalyze N-terminal peptide bond hydrolysis and occupy many diverse roles across all domains of life. Here we present evidence that an M1-family aminopeptidase, PfA-M1, has been recruited to specialized roles in the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. PfA-M1 is abundant in two subcellular compartments in asexual intraerythrocytic parasites; that is, the food vacuole, where the catabolism of host hemoglobin takes place, and the nucleus. A unique N-terminal extension contributes to the observed dual targeting by providing a signal peptide and putative alternate translation initiation sites. PfA-M1 exists as two major isoforms, a nuclear 120-kDa species and a processed species consisting of a complex of 68- and 35-kDa fragments. PfA-M1 is both stable and active at the acidic pH of the food vacuole lumen. Determination of steady-state kinetic parameters for both aminoacyl-beta-naphthylamide and unmodified dipeptide substrates over the pH range 5.0-8.5 reveals that k(cat) is relatively insensitive to pH, whereas K-m increases at pH values below 6.5. At the pH of the food vacuole lumen (5.0-5.5), the catalytic efficiency of PfA-M1 remains high. Consistent with the kinetic data, the affinity of peptidic competitive inhibitors is diminished at acidic pH. Together, these results support a catalytic role for PfA-M1 in the food vacuole and indicate the importance of evaluating the potency of peptidic inhibitors at physiologically relevant pH values. They also suggest a second, distinct function for this enzyme in the parasite nucleus.

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