AI Article Synopsis

  • An altered version of peptide deformylase from Plasmodium falciparum has been successfully cocrystallized with a synthesized inhibitor, revealing a strong binding affinity.
  • The new crystal structure is determined at 2.2 A resolution, which is an improvement over the previous 2.8 A resolution of the unliganded PfPDF, thanks to modifications made to the protein construct.
  • This study presents the first-ever structure of a eukaryotic PDF protein in complex with a ligand, highlighting its potential as a drug target for malaria treatment.

Article Abstract

An altered version of peptide deformylase from Plasmodium falciparum (PfPDF), the organism that causes the most devastating form of malaria, has been cocrystallized with a synthesized inhibitor that has submicromolar affinity for its target protein. The structure is solved at 2.2 A resolution, an improvement over the 2.8 A resolution achieved during the structural determination of unliganded PfPDF. This represents the successful outcome of modifying the protein construct in order to overcome adverse crystal contacts and other problems encountered in the study of unliganded PfPDF. Two molecules of PfPDF are found in the asymmetric unit of the current structure. The active site of each monomer of PfPDF is occupied by a proteolyzed fragment of the tripeptide-like inhibitor. Unexpectedly, each PfPDF subunit is associated with two nearly complete molecules of the inhibitor, found at a protein-protein interface. This is the first structure of a eukaryotic PDF protein, a potential drug target, in complex with a ligand.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2280045PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1110/ps.03456404DOI Listing

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