La Trobe

Disrupting the Allosteric Interaction between the Plasmodium falciparum cAMP-dependent Kinase and Its Regulatory Subunit

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posted on 2023-02-22, 02:55 authored by DR Littler, HE Bullen, KL Harvey, Travis BeddoeTravis Beddoe, BS Crabb, J Rossjohn, PR Gilson
The ubiquitous second messenger cAMP mediates signal transduction processes in the malarial parasite that regulate host erythrocyte invasion and the proliferation of merozoites. In Plasmodium falciparum, the central receptor for cAMP is the single regulatory subunit (R) of protein kinase A (PKA). To aid the development of compounds that can selectively dysregulate parasite PKA signaling, we solved the structure of the PKA regulatory subunit in complex with cAMP and a related analogue that displays antimalarial activity, (Sp)-2-Cl-cAMPS. Prior to signaling, PKA-R holds the kinase's catalytic subunit (C) in an inactive state by exerting an allosteric inhibitory effect. When two cAMP molecules bind to PKA-R, they stabilize a structural conformation that facilitates its dissociation, freeing PKA-C to phosphorylate downstream substrates such as apical membrane antigen 1. Although PKA activity was known to be necessary for erythrocytic proliferation, we show that uncontrolled induction of PKA activity using membrane-permeable agonists is equally disruptive to growth.

Funding

This work was supported by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Project Grant APP1068287 and funding from the Victorian Operational Infrastructure Support Program received by the Burnet Institute.

History

Publication Date

2016-12-02

Journal

Journal of Biological Chemistry

Volume

291

Issue

49

Pagination

12p. (p. 25375-25386)

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

1083-351X

Rights Statement

© 2016 ASBMB. Currently published by Elsevier Inc; originally published by American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/