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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The third enzyme of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGDH), is present in the four major stages of Trypanosoma cruzi, CL Brener clone. The enzyme was too unstable to be purified from epimastigote cell-free extracts. Two genes encoding 6PGDH were cloned and sequenced; the predicted amino acid sequences differ only in five non-essential residues. Since Southern blots suggested the presence of a single copy per haploid genome, the two genes found are probably alleles. One of these genes, encoding a protein with 78.6% identity with the Trypanosoma brucei 6PGDH, was expressed in Escherichia coli as an active recombinant enzyme, which was as unstable as the native 6PGDH. Modeling of the T. cruzi enzyme using the three-dimensional structure of the T. brucei 6PGDH as template suggested the lack of two out of five salt bridges proposed to strengthen subunit interactions in the active dimer. Restoring of these bridges by site-directed mutagenesis resulted in a more stable recombinant T. cruzi 6PGDH, which was used to determine the kinetic parameters. The K(m) value for 6-phosphogluconate (22.2+/-0.4 microM) was identical to the values reported for 6PGDHs from mammals, but the K(m) for NADP (5.9+/-0.2 microM) was significantly lower than the value reported for the human enzyme, and closer to that for the T. brucei enzyme. This suggests the possibility that inhibitors of the T. brucei 6PGDH, under development as potential drugs against African Trypanosomiasis, might also be successful for the chemotherapy of
Chagas
disease.
Mol
Biochem Parasitol 2004 Feb
PMID:The 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase from Trypanosoma cruzi: the absence of two inter-subunit salt bridges as a reason for enzyme instability. 1469 32
Chagas
disease, caused by the parasite protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, is characterised by a variable clinical course, from symptomless cases to severe chronic disease with cardiac and/or gastrointestinal involvement. This variability has been attributed both to differences in the host response and to genomic heterogeneity of the parasite. This article reviews the evidence in favour of an important role of the genetic constitution of T. cruzi in determining the clinical characteristics of
Chagas
disease and discusses the basis of the 'Clonal-Histotropic Model' for the pathogenesis of this disease.
Expert Rev
Mol
Med 2002 Mar 05
PMID:Chagas disease: role of parasite genetic variation in pathogenesis. 1498 89
Although parasites range from protozoan to complex, evolutionary advanced arthropods, in general, a hallmark of parasite life cycles is their ability to adapt to changes in temperature, pH and host defense strategies. Calreticulin, a calcium-binding protein, highly conserved and multifunctional, is present in every cell of higher organisms, except erythrocytes. The surprising array of calreticulin-associated functions include lectin-like chaperoning, calcium storage and signaling, modulation of gene expression, cell adhesion, enhancement of phagocytosis of C1q or collectin opsonized apoptotic cells, inhibition of angiogenesis and tumoral growth, inhibition of perforin pore formation in T and NK cells, and inhibition of C1q-dependent complement activation. Likewise, calreticulin is present in a wide spectrum of sub cellular compartments. Parasite calreticulin shows a surprisingly high degree of conservation within the framework of its functional domains. Its role within the parasite/host relationship needs to be assessed further, in particular with regard to its impact on parasite infectivity, by helping to evade from its hosts' immune response. With special emphasis on calreticulin from Trypanosoma cruzi, the intracellular protozoan agent of
American trypanosomiasis
(
Chagas' disease
), we wish to exemplify and highlight the various implications of parasite calreticulin, within the pathophysiology of parasite-mediated human and animal disease.
Mol
Immunol 2004 Mar
PMID:Role of calreticulin from parasites in its interaction with vertebrate hosts. 1512 45
Triatoma brasiliensis (Hemiptera: Reduviidae: Triatominae) is the most important
Chagas
disease vector in the semiarid areas of Northeast Brazil. We analyzed mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence variation among 136 individuals representing 16 populations from across the species' distribution. Neighbor-joining and parsimony tree-building methods were used in conjunction with nested clade analysis to describe the systematics and phylogeography of this species. Our results indicate that T. brasiliensis is composed of four genetically distinct chromatic forms (referred to as brasiliensis, macromelasoma, juazeiro, and melanica) that present inter-population divergence values (0.027-0.119, corrected K2-p) and a pattern of haplotype geographic distribution compatible with the existence of a species complex. As a consequence, such forms can be treated as isolated targets in vector control programs. We were unable to infer what is shaping the population structure of the brasiliensis form as we obtained mutually exclusive causes of structure, namely a barrier to gene flow caused by past population fragmentation, and isolation by distance between populations (which would permit gene flow). We found indication of mitochondrial DNA introgression occurring among forms in putative hybrid zones.
Mol
Phylogenet Evol 2004 Jul
PMID:Nested clade and phylogeographic analyses of the Chagas disease vector Triatoma brasiliensis in Northeast Brazil. 1518 96
Enzymes involved in genomic maintenance of human parasites are attractive targets for parasite-specific drugs. The parasitic protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi contains at least two enzymes involved in the protection against potentially mutagenic uracil, a deoxyuridine triphosphate nucleotidohydrolase (dUTPase) and a uracil-DNA glycosylase belonging to the highly conserved UNG-family. Uracil-DNA glycosylase activities excise uracil from DNA and initiate a multistep base-excision repair (BER) pathway to restore the correct nucleotide sequence. Here we report the biochemical characterisation of
T.cruzi
UNG (TcUNG) and its contribution to the total uracil repair activity in
T.cruzi
. TcUNG is shown to be the major uracil-DNA glycosylase in
T.cruzi
. The purified recombinant TcUNG exhibits substrate preference for removal of uracil in the order ssU>U:G>U:A, and has no associated thymine-DNA glycosylase activity.
T.cruzi
apparently repairs U:G DNA substrate exclusively via short-patch BER, but the DNA polymerase involved surprisingly displays a vertebrate POLdelta-like pattern of inhibition. Back-up UDG activities such as SMUG, TDG and MBD4 were not found, underlying the importance of the TcUNG enzyme in protection against uracil in DNA and as a potential target for drug therapy.
J
Mol
Biol 2004 Sep 17
PMID:Trypanosoma cruzi contains a single detectable uracil-DNA glycosylase and repairs uracil exclusively via short patch base excision repair. 1534 37
As a consequence of infection by Trypanosoma cruzi, 30% of victims may develop chronic
Chagas
disease, which presents a spectrum of pathology including cardiomyopathy, megacolon and megaesophagus. The outcome of infection in a particular individual is the result of a set of complex interactions among the host genetic background, environmental and social factors, and the genetic composition of the parasite, all of which can be complicated by mixed infections and re-infections. Initially we consider what is known about the genetic structure and biological properties of the protozoan. Currently, six distinct subgroups have been characterized by different combinations of four distinct genotypic classes. The recent demonstration of genetic exchange via non-meiotic cell fusion illustrates a mechanism by which maintained heterogeneous polyploidy may have been generated in these parasites. Subsequently, we consider factors in humans and in experimental mouse-infection and tissue culture models that have contributed to our understanding of the host's susceptibility or resistance to disease. Identification of the direct players in host-pathogen interactions at the establishment and chronic phases of the disease is perhaps the best hope of a clinical handle for treatment. At some point in the future, these disparate areas of study will have to come together. It is to be hoped that this scientific fusion will result in better prognosis and treatment of
Chagas
disease.
Curr
Mol
Med 2004 Sep
PMID:The determinants of Chagas disease: connecting parasite and host genetics. 1535 7
Several species of kinetoplastid protozoa cause major human infectious diseases. Trypanosoma cruzi is responsible for the fatal
Chagas
disease in large parts of South America, the various species of Leishmania cause a number of different human diseases with millions of patients world-wide, and the African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei is the agent of human sleeping sickness, a disastrously re-emerging epidemic of fatal infections in Sub-Saharan Africa. Chemotherapy of all of these infections is in a very unsatisfactory state. cAMP signalling pathways in humans have provided interesting drug targets for a number of clinical conditions, from asthma to impotency. Similarly, cAMP signalling in kinetoplastids might offer useful targets for the development of novel antiparasitic drugs, which makes their exploration an urgent need. Current knowledge suggests that cAMP signalling proceeds along very similar pathways in all kinetoplastid pathogens (T. cruzi, the Leishmanias and T. brucei). Their adenylyl cyclases are structurally very different from the human enzymes and appear to function as enzyme-linked cell surface receptors. They might represent the major sensory apparatus of the kinetoplastids, guiding much of their environmental sensing and host/parasite interaction. The cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases of the kinetoplastids are rather similar to those of human cells and might function in similar ways. Essentially nothing is known on downstream effectors of cAMP in the kinetoplastids. Homologues of protein kinase A and its regulatory subunits have been identified, but their biochemical properties seem to be disctinct from that of mammalian protein kinase A.
Curr
Mol
Med 2004 Sep
PMID:cAMP signalling in the kinetoplastid protozoa. 1535 10
The crystal structure of the dUTPase from the important gastric pathogen Campylobacter jejuni has been solved at 1.65 A spacing. This essential bacterial enzyme is the second representative of the new family of dimeric dUTPases to be structurally characterised. Members of this family have a novel all-alpha fold and are unrelated to the all-beta dUTPases of the majority of organisms including eukaryotes such as humans, bacteria such as Escherichia coli, archaea like Methanococcus jannaschii and animal viruses. Therefore, dimeric dUTPases can be considered as candidate drug targets. The X-ray structure of the C.jejuni dUTPase in complex with the non-hydrolysable substrate analogue dUpNHp allows us to define the positions of three catalytically significant phosphate-binding magnesium ions and provides a starting point for a detailed understanding of the mechanism of dUTP/dUDP hydrolysis by dimeric dUTPases. Indeed, a water molecule present in the structure is ideally situated to act as the attacking nucleophile during hydrolysis. A comparison of the dUTPases from C.jejuni and Trypanosoma cruzi reveals a common fold with certain distinct features, both in the rigid and mobile domains as defined in the
T.cruzi
structure. Homologues of the C.jejuni dUTPase have been identified in several other bacteria and bacteriophages, including the dCTPase of phage T4. Sequence comparisons of these proteins define a new superfamily of d(C/U)TPases that includes three distinct enzyme families: (1) dUTPases in trypanosomatides, C.jejuni and several other Gram-negative bacteria, (2) predicted dUTPases in various Gram-positive bacteria and their phages, and (3) dCTP/dUTPases in enterobacterial T4-like phages. All these enzymes share a basic module that consists of two alpha-helices from the rigid domain, two helices from the mobile domain and connecting loops. These results in concert with a number of conserved residues responsible for interdomain cross-talk provide valuable insight towards rational drug design.
J
Mol
Biol 2004 Oct 01
PMID:The crystal structure of a complex of Campylobacter jejuni dUTPase with substrate analogue sheds light on the mechanism and suggests the "basic module" for dimeric d(C/U)TPases. 1536 83
Trypanosomatids are causative agents of several devastating tropical diseases such as African sleeping sickness,
Chagas' disease
and leishmaniasis. There are no effective vaccines available to date for treatment of these protozoan diseases, while current drugs have limited efficacy, significant toxicity and suffer from increasing resistance. Trypanosomatids have several remarkable and unique metabolic and structural features that are of great interest for developing new anti-protozoan therapeutics. One such feature is "RNA editing", an essential process in these pathogenic protozoa. Transcripts for key trypanosomatid mitochondrial proteins undergo extensive post-transcriptional RNA editing by specifically inserting or deleting uridylates from pre-mature mRNA in order to create mature mRNAs that encode functional proteins. The RNA editing process is carried out in a approximately 1.6 MDa multi-protein complex, the editosome. In Trypanosoma brucei, one of the editosome's core enzymes, the RNA editing ligase 1 (TbREL1), has been shown to be essential for survival of both insect and bloodstream forms of the parasite. We report here the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of TbREL1 at 1.2 A resolution, in complex with ATP and magnesium. The magnesium ion interacts with the beta and gamma-phosphate groups and is almost perfectly octahedrally coordinated by six phosphate and water oxygen atoms. ATP makes extensive direct and indirect interactions with the ligase via essentially all its atoms while extending its base into a deep pocket. In addition, the ATP makes numerous interactions with residues that are conserved in the editing ligases only. Further away from the active site, TbREL1 contains a unique loop containing several hydrophobic residues that are highly conserved among trypanosomatid RNA editing ligases which may play a role in protein-protein interactions in the editosome. The distinct characteristics of the adenine-binding pocket, and the absence of any close homolog in the human genome, bode well for the design of selective inhibitors that will block the essential RNA ligase function in a number of major protozoan pathogens.
J
Mol
Biol 2004 Oct 22
PMID:High resolution crystal structure of a key editosome enzyme from Trypanosoma brucei: RNA editing ligase 1. 1546 48
Apyrases are nucleoside triphosphate-diphosphohydrolases that remove Pi from ATP and ADP. The blood feeding reduviid Triatoma infestans, which transmits the Trypanosoma cruzi agent of
Chagas
disease to animals and man, presents in its salivary glands five apyrases with molecular masses of 88, 82, 79, 68 and 67 kDa. These triatomine apyrases have been associated with the prevention of ADP induced platelet aggregation in the host. Here we provide biochemical data showing that these apyrases are stored in the lumen of the salivary gland D1 pairs, and that about one half of the pool of the enzyme is consumed during feeding. After the feeding recovery of apyrases to maximal activity level takes days, thus suggesting de novo protein synthesis. This hypothesis is supported by quantitative RT-PCR analysis which shows an upregulation of the 79 kDa apyrase mRNA level after feeding.
Insect Biochem
Mol
Biol 2004 Oct
PMID:Kinetics of expression of the salivary apyrases in Triatoma infestans. 1547 99
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