Publications
2009
Bour T, Akaddar A, Lorber B, Blais S, Balg C, Candolfi E, Frugier M
Plasmodial aspartyl-tRNA synthetases and peculiarities in Plasmodium falciparum Article de journal
Dans: J Biol Chem, vol. 284, non 28, p. 18893-18903, 2009, ISBN: 19443655, (0021-9258 (Print) 0021-9258 (Linking) Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't).
Résumé | Liens | BibTeX | Étiquettes: Amino Acid, Amino Acid Sequence Amino Acids/chemistry Animals Aspartate-tRNA Ligase/*metabolism Aspartic Acid/chemistry Base Sequence Cloning, FRUGIER, Molecular Cytoplasm/metabolism Dimerization Fungal Proteins/chemistry Humans Kinetics Molecular Sequence Data Plasmodium falciparum Protein Structure, Tertiary Sequence Homology, Unité ARN
@article{,
title = {Plasmodial aspartyl-tRNA synthetases and peculiarities in Plasmodium falciparum},
author = {T Bour and A Akaddar and B Lorber and S Blais and C Balg and E Candolfi and M Frugier},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=19443655},
isbn = {19443655},
year = {2009},
date = {2009-01-01},
journal = {J Biol Chem},
volume = {284},
number = {28},
pages = {18893-18903},
abstract = {Distinctive features of aspartyl-transfer RNA (tRNA) synthetases (AspRS) from the protozoan Plasmodium genus are described. These apicomplexan AspRSs contain 29-31 amino acid insertions in their anticodon binding domains, a remarkably long N-terminal appendix that varies in size from 110 to 165 amino acids and two potential initiation codons. This article focuses on the atypical functional and structural properties of Plasmodium falciparum cytosolic AspRS, the causative parasite of human malaria. This species encodes a 626 or 577 amino acids AspRS depending on whether initiation starts on the first or second in-frame initiation codon. The longer protein has poor solubility and a propensity to aggregate. Production of the short version was favored as shown by the comparison of the recombinant protein with endogenous AspRS. Comparison of the tRNA aminoacylation activity of wild-type and mutant parasite AspRSs with those of yeast and human AspRSs revealed unique properties. The N-terminal extension contains a motif that provides unexpectedly strong RNA binding to plasmodial AspRS. Furthermore, experiments demonstrated the requirement of the plasmodial insertion for AspRS dimerization and, therefore, tRNA aminoacylation and other putative functions. Implications for the parasite biology are proposed. These data provide a robust background for unraveling the precise functional properties of the parasite AspRS and for developing novel lead compounds against malaria, targeting its idiosyncratic domains.},
note = {0021-9258 (Print)
0021-9258 (Linking)
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't},
keywords = {Amino Acid, Amino Acid Sequence Amino Acids/chemistry Animals Aspartate-tRNA Ligase/*metabolism Aspartic Acid/chemistry Base Sequence Cloning, FRUGIER, Molecular Cytoplasm/metabolism Dimerization Fungal Proteins/chemistry Humans Kinetics Molecular Sequence Data Plasmodium falciparum Protein Structure, Tertiary Sequence Homology, Unité ARN},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Distinctive features of aspartyl-transfer RNA (tRNA) synthetases (AspRS) from the protozoan Plasmodium genus are described. These apicomplexan AspRSs contain 29-31 amino acid insertions in their anticodon binding domains, a remarkably long N-terminal appendix that varies in size from 110 to 165 amino acids and two potential initiation codons. This article focuses on the atypical functional and structural properties of Plasmodium falciparum cytosolic AspRS, the causative parasite of human malaria. This species encodes a 626 or 577 amino acids AspRS depending on whether initiation starts on the first or second in-frame initiation codon. The longer protein has poor solubility and a propensity to aggregate. Production of the short version was favored as shown by the comparison of the recombinant protein with endogenous AspRS. Comparison of the tRNA aminoacylation activity of wild-type and mutant parasite AspRSs with those of yeast and human AspRSs revealed unique properties. The N-terminal extension contains a motif that provides unexpectedly strong RNA binding to plasmodial AspRS. Furthermore, experiments demonstrated the requirement of the plasmodial insertion for AspRS dimerization and, therefore, tRNA aminoacylation and other putative functions. Implications for the parasite biology are proposed. These data provide a robust background for unraveling the precise functional properties of the parasite AspRS and for developing novel lead compounds against malaria, targeting its idiosyncratic domains.