Nedd8 hydrolysis by UCH proteases in Plasmodium parasites

Plasmodium parasites are the causative agents of malaria, a disease with wide public health repercussions. Increasing drug resistance and the absence of a vaccine make finding new chemotherapeutic strategies imperative. Components of the ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like pathways have garnered increased...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS pathogens 2019-10, Vol.15 (10), p.e1008086-e1008086
Hauptverfasser: Karpiyevich, Maryia, Adjalley, Sophie, Mol, Marco, Ascher, David B, Mason, Bethany, van der Heden van Noort, Gerbrand J, Laman, Heike, Ovaa, Huib, Lee, Marcus C S, Artavanis-Tsakonas, Katerina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Plasmodium parasites are the causative agents of malaria, a disease with wide public health repercussions. Increasing drug resistance and the absence of a vaccine make finding new chemotherapeutic strategies imperative. Components of the ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like pathways have garnered increased attention as novel targets given their necessity to parasite survival. Understanding how these pathways are regulated in Plasmodium and identifying differences to the host is paramount to selectively interfering with parasites. Here, we focus on Nedd8 modification in Plasmodium falciparum, given its central role to cell division and DNA repair, processes critical to Plasmodium parasites given their unusual cell cycle and requirement for refined repair mechanisms. By applying a functional chemical approach, we show that deNeddylation is controlled by a different set of enzymes in the parasite versus the human host. We elucidate the molecular determinants of the unusual dual ubiquitin/Nedd8 recognition by the essential PfUCH37 enzyme and, through parasite transgenics and drug assays, determine that only its ubiquitin activity is critical to parasite survival. Our experiments reveal interesting evolutionary differences in how neddylation is controlled in higher versus lower eukaryotes, and highlight the Nedd8 pathway as worthy of further exploration for therapeutic targeting in antimalarial drug design.
ISSN:1553-7374
1553-7366
1553-7374
DOI:10.1371/journal.ppat.1008086