Mark E. Drew
Johns Hopkins University
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Featured researches published by Mark E. Drew.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Jun Liu; Ilya Y. Gluzman; Mark E. Drew; Daniel E. Goldberg
Plasmepsins (PMs) are thought to have an important function in hemoglobin degradation in the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum and have generated interest as antimalarial drug targets. Four paralogous plasmepsins reside in the food vacuole of P. falciparum. Targeted gene disruption by double crossover homologous recombination has been employed to study food vacuole plasmepsin function in cultured parasites. Parasite clones with deletions in each of the individual PM I, PM II, and HAP genes as well as clones with a double PM IV/PM I disruption have been generated. All of these clones lack the corresponding PMs, are viable, and appear morphologically normal. PM II and PM IV/I disruptions have longer doubling times than the 3D7 parental line in rich RPMI medium. This appears to be because of a decreased level of productive progeny rather than an increased cell cycle time. In amino acid-limited medium, all four knockouts exhibit slower growth than the parental strain. Compared with 3D7, knock-out clone sensitivity to aspartic and cysteine protease inhibitors is changed minimally. These results suggest substantial functional redundancy and have important implications for the design of antimalarial drugs. The slow growth phenotype may explain why P. falciparum has maintained four plasmepsin genes with overlapping functions.
The EMBO Journal | 2002
James C. Morris; Zefeng Wang; Mark E. Drew; Paul T. Englund
RNA interference (RNAi) is a powerful tool for identifying gene function in Trypanosoma brucei. We generated an RNAi library, the first of its kind in any organism, by ligation of genomic fragments into the vector pZJMβ. After transfection at ∼5‐fold genome coverage, trypanosomes were induced to express double‐stranded RNA and screened for reduced con canavalin A (conA) binding. Since this lectin binds the surface glycoprotein EP‐procyclin, we predicted that cells would lose affinity to conA if RNAi silenced genes affecting EP‐procyclin expression or modification. We found a cell line in which RNAi switches expression from glycosylated EP‐procyclins to the unglycosylated GPEET‐procyclin. This switch results from silencing a hexokinase gene. The relationship between procyclin expression and glycolysis was supported by silencing other genes in the glycolytic pathway, and confirmed by observation of a similar upregulation of GPEET‐ procyclin when parental cells were grown in medium depleted of glucose. These data suggest that T.brucei ‘senses’ changes in glucose level and modulates procyclin expression accordingly.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Mark E. Drew; Ritu Banerjee; Eric W. Uffman; Scott R. Gilbertson; Philip J. Rosenthal; Daniel E. Goldberg
Intraerythrocytic malaria parasites use host hemoglobin as a major nutrient source. Aspartic proteases (plasmepsins) and cysteine proteases (falcipains) function in the early steps of the hemoglobin degradation pathway. There is extensive functional redundancy within and between these protease families. Plasmepsins are synthesized as integral membrane proenzymes that are activated by cleavage from the membrane. This cleavage is mediated by a maturase activity whose identity has been elusive. We have used a combination of cell biology, chemical biology, and enzymology approaches to analyze this processing event. These studies reveal that plasmepsin processing occurs primarily via the falcipains; however, if falcipain activity is blocked, autoprocessing can take place, serving as an alternate activation system. These results establish a further level of redundancy between the protease families involved in Plasmodium hemoglobin degradation.
International Journal for Parasitology | 2001
James C. Morris; Mark E. Drew; Michele M. Klingbeil; Shawn A. Motyka; Zefeng Wang; Paul T. Englund
In this review we will describe the replication of kinetoplast DNA, a subject that our lab has studied for many years. Our knowledge of kinetoplast DNA replication has depended mostly upon the investigation of the biochemical properties and intramitochondrial localisation of replication proteins and enzymes as well as a study of the structure and dynamics of kinetoplast DNA replication intermediates. We will first review the properties of the characterised kinetoplast DNA replication proteins and then describe our current model for kinetoplast DNA replication.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Jayleen Grams; James C. Morris; Mark E. Drew; Zefeng Wang; Paul T. Englund; Stephen L. Hajduk
Understanding mitochondrial transcription is a requisite first step toward understanding the regulation of mitochondrial gene expression in kinetoplastids. Here we report the identification and functional characterization of a mitochondrial RNA polymerase (mtRNAP) from Trypanosoma brucei, the firsttrans-acting factor involved in kinetoplast mitochondrial transcription to be identified. Using sequences conserved among the catalytic domains of the single-subunit mtRNAPs, we were able to obtain a full-length sequence for a candidate mtRNAP from T. brucei. Sequence comparison indicates that it shares homology in its catalytic domain with other single-subunit mtRNAPs, including functionally conserved residues that are identical in all single-subunit RNAPs. We used RNA interference to functionally knock out the gene product to determine whether the candidate gene represents an mtRNAP. As predicted for a mitochondrial specific RNA polymerase, reduction of the gene product resulted in a specific decrease of mitochondrial versus nuclear transcripts. Additionally, similar to the mtRNAP of other organisms, the mtRNAP characterized here is involved in replication of the mitochondrial genome. Thus, based on sequence comparison and functional studies, we have cloned an mtRNAP from trypanosomes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Shawn A. Motyka; Mark E. Drew; Gokben Yildirir; Paul T. Englund
The mitochondrial genome of trypanosomes, termed kinetoplast DNA (kDNA), contains thousands of minicircles and dozens of maxicircles topologically interlocked in a network. To identify proteins involved in network replication, we screened an inducible RNA interference-based genomic library for cells that lose kinetoplast DNA. In one cloned cell line with inducible kinetoplast DNA loss, we found that the RNA interference vector had aberrantly integrated into the genome resulting in overexpression of genes down-stream of the integration site (Motyka, S. A., Zhao, Z., Gull, K., and Englund, P. T. (2004) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 134, 163–167). We now report that the relevant overexpressed gene encodes a mitochondrial cytochrome b5 reductase-like protein. This overexpression caused kDNA loss by oxidation/inactivation of the universal minicircle sequence-binding protein, which normally binds the minicircle replication origin and triggers replication. The rapid loss of maxicircles suggests that the universal minicircle sequence-binding protein might also control maxicircle replication. Several lines of evidence indicate that the cytochrome b5 reductase-like protein controls the oxidization status of the universal minicircle sequence-binding protein via tryparedoxin, a mitochondrial redox protein. For example, overexpression of mitochondrial tryparedoxin peroxidase, which utilizes tryparedoxin, also caused oxidation of the universal minicircle sequence-binding protein and kDNA loss. Furthermore, the growth defect caused by overexpression of cytochrome b5 reductase-like protein could be partially rescued by simultaneously overexpressing tryparedoxin.
The EMBO Journal | 2002
Zefeng Wang; Mark E. Drew; James C. Morris; Paul T. Englund
Trypanosome mitochondrial DNA is a network containing thousands of interlocked minicircles. Silencing of a mitochondrial topoisomerase II by RNA interference (RNAi) causes progressive network shrinking, allowing assessment of the minimal network size compatible with viability. We cloned surviving cells after short‐term RNAi and found, as expected, that the number of surviving clones decreased with the duration of RNAi. Unexpectedly, a clonal cell line contained heterogeneously sized networks, some being very small. Several experiments showed that cells survived network shrinkage by asymmetrical division of replicated networks, sacrificing daughters with the small progeny network. Therefore, the average network size gradually increased. During the network shrinkage and early stages of recovery, there were changes in the minicircle repertoire.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Zefeng Wang; James C. Morris; Mark E. Drew; Paul T. Englund
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Gayatri Vasudevan; Nicola S. Carter; Mark E. Drew; Stephen M. Beverley; Marco A. Sanchez; Andreas Seyfang; Buddy Ullman; Scott M. Landfear
Journal of Cell Biology | 2001
Mark E. Drew; Paul T. Englund