Understanding the complex formation of falstatin; an endogenous macromolecular inhibitor of falcipains

Proteolytic activity constitutes a fundamental process essential for the survival of the malaria parasite and is thus highly regulated. Falstatin, a protease inhibitor of Plasmodium falciparum, tightly regulates the activity of cysteine hemoglobinases, falcipain-2 and 3 (FP2, FP3), by inhibiting FP2...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biological macromolecules 2024-04, Vol.265 (Pt 1), p.130420-130420, Article 130420
Hauptverfasser: Pasupureddy, Rahul, Verma, Sonia, Goyal, Bharti, Pant, Akansha, Sharma, Ruby, Bhatt, Shruti, Vashisht, Kapil, Singh, Shailja, Saxena, Ajay K., Dixit, Rajnikant, Chakraborti, Soumyananda, Pandey, Kailash C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Proteolytic activity constitutes a fundamental process essential for the survival of the malaria parasite and is thus highly regulated. Falstatin, a protease inhibitor of Plasmodium falciparum, tightly regulates the activity of cysteine hemoglobinases, falcipain-2 and 3 (FP2, FP3), by inhibiting FP2 through a single surface exposed loop. However, the multimeric nature of falstatin and its interaction with FP2 remained unexplored. Here we report that the N-terminal falstatin region is highly disordered, and needs chaperone activity (heat-shock protein 70, HSP70) for its folding. Protein-protein interaction assays showed a significant interaction between falstatin and HSP70. Further, characterization of the falstatin multimer through a series of biophysical techniques identified the formation of a falstatin decamer, which was extremely thermostable. Computational analysis of the falstatin decamer showed the presence of five falstatin dimers, with each dimer aligned in a head-to-tail orientation. Further, the falstatin C-terminal region was revealed to be primarily involved in the oligomerization process. Stoichiometric analysis of the FP2-falstatin multimer showed the formation of a heterooligomeric complex in a 1:1 ratio, with the participation of ten subunits of each protein. Taken together, our results report a novel protease-inhibitor complex and strengthens our understanding of the regulatory mechanisms of major plasmodium hemoglobinases. •The N-terminal region of falstatin is Asn-rich and interacts with HSP70.•Falstatin forms a multimer of ten subunits and is stable.•The falstatin multimer interacts with FP2 to form an FP2-falstatin multimeric complex.•A decameric model of falstatin is proposed.•Rationale for falstatin oligomerization in regulating hemoglobinase activity
ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.130420