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    AuthorColetta, Andrea (1)D'Annessa, Ilda (1)Di Marino, Daniele (1)
    Tramontano, Anna (1)
    Via, Allegra (1)JournalProteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics (1)KAUST Grant NumberKUK-I1-012-43 (1)Publisher
    Wiley (1)
    SubjectCpa (1)
    Homology modeling (1)
    Malaria (1)
    Mm-gbsa (1)
    Molecular dynamics (1)
    View MoreTypeArticle (1)Year (Issue Date)2015 (1)Item Availability
    Open Access (1)

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    Characterization of the differences in the cyclopiazonic acid binding mode to mammalian and P. Falciparum Ca2+ pumps: a computational study.

    Di Marino, Daniele; D'Annessa, Ilda; Coletta, Andrea; Via, Allegra; Tramontano, Anna (Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics, Wiley, 2015-02-10) [Article]
    Despite the investments in malaria research, an effective vaccine has not yet been developed and the causative parasites are becoming increasingly resistant to most of the available drugs. PfATP6, the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ pump (SERCA) of P. falciparum, has been recently genetically validated as a potential antimalarial target and cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) has been found to be a potent inhibitor of SERCAs in several organisms, including P. falciparum. In position 263, PfATP6 displays a leucine residue, whilst the corresponding position in the mammalian SERCA is occupied by a glutamic acid. The PfATP6 L263E mutation has been studied in relation to the artemisinin inhibitory effect on P. falciparum and recent studies have provided evidence that the parasite with this mutation is more susceptible to CPA. Here, we characterized, for the first time, the interaction of CPA with PfATP6 and its mammalian counterpart to understand similarities and differences in the mode of binding of the inhibitor to the two Ca2+ pumps. We found that, even though CPA does not directly interact with the residue in position 263, the presence of a hydrophobic residue in this position in PfATP6 rather than a negatively charged one, as in the mammalian SERCA, entails a conformational arrangement of the binding pocket which, in turn, determines a relaxation of CPA leading to a different binding mode of the compound. Our findings highlight differences between the plasmodial and human SERCA CPA-binding pockets that may be exploited to design CPA derivatives more selective toward PfATP6.
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