This chapter elaborates the structural chemistry and the biological aspects of plasmepsins. Plasmepsin I is capable of cleaving native human hemoglobin and acid-denatured globin, with a pH optimum around 5. Plasmepsin I, II, IV and HAP are made as 51 kDa precursors that are cleaved to 37 kDa mature forms. There are two disulfide bonds predicted. The second domain contains an active-site Asp-Ser-Gly instead of the usual aspartic protease Asp-Thr-Gly. HAP is an exception to this. A molecular model of plasmepsin I has been constructed, based on the crystal structure of the highly homologous plasmepsin II. The modeled structure bears general features of mammalian and fungal aspartic proteases, and among mammalian orthologs shares greatest struc...
A new aspartic proteinase from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is able to hydrolyse...
The reaction mechanisms for the hemoglobin degrading enzymes in the Plasmodium falciparum malaria pa...
Comparative protein modeling, active site analysis and binding site specificity for the homologous s...
This chapter elaborates the structural chemistry and the biological aspects of plasmepsins. Plasmeps...
Malaria is the one most important parasitic disease of humans, which affects approximately one hundr...
Plasmepsin group of enzymes are key enzymes in the life cycle of malarial parasites. As inhibition o...
Plasmepsins (Plms) are aspartic proteases involved in the degradation of human hemoglobin by Plasmod...
Malaria is a deadly disease killing worldwide hundreds of thousands people each year and the respons...
Two aspartic proteinases, plasmepsins I and II, are present in the digestive vacuole of the human ma...
Plasmepsins (Plms) are aspartic proteases involved in the degradation of human hemoglobin by Plasmod...
Though different species of the genus Plasmodium may be responsible for malaria, the variant caused ...
The aspartic proteinases are a family of enzymes involved in a number of important biological proces...
A clone encoding the aspartic proteinase (PFAPD) from Plasmodium falciparum strain HB3 was obtained ...
AbstractA new aspartic proteinase from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is able to h...
A new aspartic proteinase from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is able to hydrolyse...
The reaction mechanisms for the hemoglobin degrading enzymes in the Plasmodium falciparum malaria pa...
Comparative protein modeling, active site analysis and binding site specificity for the homologous s...
This chapter elaborates the structural chemistry and the biological aspects of plasmepsins. Plasmeps...
Malaria is the one most important parasitic disease of humans, which affects approximately one hundr...
Plasmepsin group of enzymes are key enzymes in the life cycle of malarial parasites. As inhibition o...
Plasmepsins (Plms) are aspartic proteases involved in the degradation of human hemoglobin by Plasmod...
Malaria is a deadly disease killing worldwide hundreds of thousands people each year and the respons...
Two aspartic proteinases, plasmepsins I and II, are present in the digestive vacuole of the human ma...
Plasmepsins (Plms) are aspartic proteases involved in the degradation of human hemoglobin by Plasmod...
Though different species of the genus Plasmodium may be responsible for malaria, the variant caused ...
The aspartic proteinases are a family of enzymes involved in a number of important biological proces...
A clone encoding the aspartic proteinase (PFAPD) from Plasmodium falciparum strain HB3 was obtained ...
AbstractA new aspartic proteinase from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is able to h...
A new aspartic proteinase from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is able to hydrolyse...
The reaction mechanisms for the hemoglobin degrading enzymes in the Plasmodium falciparum malaria pa...
Comparative protein modeling, active site analysis and binding site specificity for the homologous s...