Distinct evolution of type I glutamine synthetase in Plasmodium and its species-specific requirement

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作者
Sourav Ghosh
Rajib Kundu
Manjunatha Chandana
Rahul Das
Aditya Anand
Subhashree Beura
Ruchir Chandrakant Bobde
Vishal Jain
Sowmya Ramakant Prabhu
Prativa Kumari Behera
Akshaya Kumar Mohanty
Mahabala Chakrapani
Kapaettu Satyamoorthy
Amol Ratnakar Suryawanshi
Anshuman Dixit
Govindarajan Padmanaban
Viswanathan Arun Nagaraj
机构
[1] Institute of Life Sciences,Infectious Disease Biology
[2] Regional Centre for Biotechnology,School of Biotechnology
[3] Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology,Department of Biotechnology, Manipal School of Life Sciences
[4] Manipal Academy of Higher Education,Department of Medicine, Kasturba Medical College, Mangalore
[5] Ispat General Hospital,Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Manipal School of Life Sciences
[6] Manipal Academy of Higher Education,Department of Biochemistry
[7] Manipal Academy of Higher Education,undefined
[8] Indian Institute of Science,undefined
来源
Nature Communications | / 14卷
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摘要
Malaria parasite lacks canonical pathways for amino acid biosynthesis and depends primarily on hemoglobin degradation and extracellular resources for amino acids. Interestingly, a putative gene for glutamine synthetase (GS) is retained despite glutamine being an abundant amino acid in human and mosquito hosts. Here we show Plasmodium GS has evolved as a unique type I enzyme with distinct structural and regulatory properties to adapt to the asexual niche. Methionine sulfoximine (MSO) and phosphinothricin (PPT) inhibit parasite GS activity. GS is localized to the parasite cytosol and abundantly expressed in all the life cycle stages. Parasite GS displays species-specific requirement in Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) having asparagine-rich proteome. Targeting PfGS affects asparagine levels and inhibits protein synthesis through eIF2α phosphorylation leading to parasite death. Exposure of artemisinin-resistant Pf parasites to MSO and PPT inhibits the emergence of viable parasites upon artemisinin treatment.
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