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Published May 2014 | public
Journal Article

Probing the equatorial groove of the hookworm protein and vaccine candidate antigen, Na-ASP-2

Abstract

Hookworm activation-associated secreted proteins can be structurally classified into at least three different groups. The hallmark feature of Group 1 activation-associated secreted proteins is a prominent equatorial groove, which is inferred to form a ligand binding site. Furthermore, a conserved tandem histidine motif is located in the centre of the groove and believed to provide or support a yet to be determined catalytic activity. Here, we report three-dimensional crystal structures of Na-ASP-2, an L3-secreted activation-associated secreted protein from the human hookworm Necator americanus, which demonstrate transition metal binding ability of the conserved tandem histidine motif. We further identified moderate phosphohydrolase activity of recombinant Na-ASP-2, which relates to the tandem histidine motif. By panning a random 12-mer peptide phage library, we identified a peptide with high similarity to the human calcium-activated potassium channel SK3, and confirm binding of the synthetic peptide to recombinant Na-ASP-2 by differential scanning fluorimetry. Potential binding modes of the peptide to Na-ASP-2 were studied by molecular dynamics simulations which clearly identify a preferred topology of the Na-ASP-2:SK3 peptide complex.

Additional Information

© 2014 Elsevier Ltd. Received 19 December 2013; Received in revised form 23 February 2014; Accepted 4 March 2014; Available online 13 March 2014. This study was supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC LP100100092 to RBG, AH, AL and PWS). We also gratefully acknowledge funding of our laboratories by the National Health and Medical Research Council (AH, MKJ, AL, RBG). LT is the recipient of an Australian Postgraduate Award. AL is the recipient of a principal research fellowship from NHMRC. Parts of this research were undertaken on the MX1 beamline at the Australian Synchrotron, Victoria, Australia.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 26, 2023