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1.
Robello C  Gamarro F  Castanys S  Alvarez-Valin F 《Gene》2000,246(1-2):331-338
For the purpose of investigating the evolutionary relationships among strains of the human parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, we have determined the nucleotide sequence, in 16 T. cruzi stocks, of a DNA fragment having approximately 1030 nucleotides in length. Phylogenetic analyses show the presence of at least three major groups of T. cruzi strains, a result that contradicts previous phylogenetic inferences based on polymorphism data. We also performed an analysis of the relative extent of nucleotide divergence among T. cruzi strains compared to the divergence between Leishmania species, using the gene encoding pteridine reductase. The results presented in this work show that the divergence among the most distant T. cruzi strains is at least as high as the divergence between two different species complexes of Leishmania, those containing L. major and L. mexicana.  相似文献   

2.
The protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei causes human African sleeping sickness in sub-Saharan Africa. The parasite makes several essential glycoproteins, which has led to the investigation of the sugar nucleotides and glycosyltransferases required to synthesize these structures. Fucose is a common sugar in glycoconjugates from many organisms; however, the sugar nucleotide donor GDP-fucose was only recently detected in T. brucei, and the importance of fucose metabolism in this organism is not known. In this paper, we identified the genes encoding functional GDP-fucose biosynthesis enzymes in T. brucei and created conditional null mutants of TbGMD, the gene encoding the first enzyme in the pathway from GDP-mannose to GDP-fucose, in both bloodstream form and procyclic form parasites. Under nonpermissive conditions, both life cycle forms of the parasite became depleted in GDP-fucose and suffered growth arrest, demonstrating that fucose metabolism is essential to both life cycle stages. In procyclic form parasites, flagellar detachment from the cell body was also observed under nonpermissive conditions, suggesting that fucose plays a significant role in flagellar adhesion. Fluorescence microscopy of epitope-tagged TbGMD revealed that this enzyme is localized in glycosomes, despite the absence of PTS-1 or PTS-2 target sequences.  相似文献   

3.
The glyoxalase system, comprizing glyoxalase I and glyoxalase II, is a ubiquitous pathway that detoxifies highly reactive aldehydes, such as methylglyoxal, using glutathione as a cofactor. Recent studies of Leishmania major glyoxalase I and Trypanosoma brucei glyoxalase II have revealed a unique dependence upon the trypanosomatid thiol trypanothione as a cofactor. This difference suggests that the trypanothione-dependent glyoxalase system may be an attractive target for rational drug design against the trypanosomatid parasites. Here we describe the cloning, expression and kinetic characterization of glyoxalase I from Trypanosoma cruzi. Like L. major glyoxalase I, recombinant T. cruzi glyoxalase I showed a preference for nickel as its metal cofactor. In contrast with the L. major enzyme, T. cruzi glyoxalase I was far less fast-idious in its choice of metal cofactor efficiently utilizing cobalt, manganese and zinc. T. cruzi glyoxalase I isomerized hemithio-acetal adducts of trypanothione more than 2400 times more efficiently than glutathione adducts, with the methylglyoxal adducts 2-3-fold better substrates than the equivalent phenylglyoxal adducts. However, glutathionylspermidine hemithioacetal adducts were most efficiently isomerized and the glutathionylspermidine-based inhibitor S-4-bromobenzylglutathionylspermidine was found to be a potent linear competitive inhibitor of the T. cruzi enzyme with a K(i) of 5.4+/-0.6 microM. Prediction algorithms, combined with subcellular fractionation, suggest that T. cruzi glyoxalase I localizes not only to the cytosol but also the mitochondria of T. cruzi epimastigotes. The contrasting substrate specificities of human and trypanosomatid glyoxalase enzymes, confirmed in the present study, suggest that the glyoxalase system may be an attractive target for anti-trypanosomal chemotherapy.  相似文献   

4.
Trypanosoma cruzi, a blood-borne parasite, is the etiological agent of Chagas disease. T. cruzi trypomastigotes, the infectious life cycle stage, can be detected in blood of infected individuals using PCR-based methods. However, soon after a natural infection, or during the chronic phase of Chagas disease, the number of parasites in blood may be very low and thus difficult to detect by PCR. To facilitate PCR-based detection methods, a parasite concentration approach was explored. A whole cell SELEX strategy was utilized to develop serum stable RNA aptamers that bind to live T. cruzi trypomastigotes. These aptamers bound to the parasite with high affinities (8-25 nM range). The highest affinity aptamer, Apt68, also demonstrated high specificity as it did not interact with the insect stage epimastigotes of T. cruzi nor with other related trypanosomatid parasites, L. donovani and T. brucei, suggesting that the target of Apt68 was expressed only on T. cruzi trypomastigotes. Biotinylated Apt68, immobilized on a solid phase, was able to capture live parasites. These captured parasites were visible microscopically, as large motile aggregates, formed when the aptamer coated paramagnetic beads bound to the surface of the trypomastigotes. Additionally, Apt68 was also able to capture and aggregate trypomastigotes from several isolates of the two major genotypes of the parasite. Using a magnet, these parasite-bead aggregates could be purified from parasite-spiked whole blood samples, even at concentrations as low as 5 parasites in 15 ml of whole blood, as detected by a real-time PCR assay. Our results show that aptamers can be used as pathogen specific ligands to capture and facilitate PCR-based detection of T. cruzi in blood.  相似文献   

5.
The intracellular parasitic protist Trypanosoma cruzi is the causative agent of Chagas disease in Latin America. In general, pyrimidine nucleotides are supplied by both de novo biosynthesis and salvage pathways. While epimastigotes-an insect form-possess both activities, amastigotes-an intracellular replicating form of T. cruzi-are unable to mediate the uptake of pyrimidine. However, the requirement of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis for parasite growth and survival has not yet been elucidated. Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase II (CPSII) is the first and rate-limiting enzyme of the de novo biosynthetic pathway, and increased CPSII activity is associated with the rapid proliferation of tumor cells. In the present study, we showed that disruption of the T. cruzi cpsII gene significantly reduced parasite growth. In particular, the growth of amastigotes lacking the cpsII gene was severely suppressed. Thus, the de novo pyrimidine pathway is important for proliferation of T. cruzi in the host cell cytoplasm and represents a promising target for chemotherapy against Chagas disease.  相似文献   

6.
Trypanosoma cruzi is the parasite causing Chagas Disease. Several results already published suggest that T. cruzi ribosomes have remarkable differences with their mammalian counterparts. In the present work, we showed that trypanosomatid (T. cruzi and Crithidia fasciculata) ribosomes are highly resistant to inactivation by trichosanthin (TCS), which is active against mammalian ribosomes. Differential resistance is an intrinsic feature of the ribosomal particles, as demonstrated by using assays where the only variable was the ribosomes source. Because we have recently described that TCS interacts with the acidic C-terminal end of mammalian ribosomal P proteins, we assayed the effect of a TCS variant, which is unable to interact with P proteins, on trypanosomatid ribosomes. This mutant showed similar shifting of IC(50) values on rat, T. cruzi and C. fasciculata ribosomes, suggesting that the resistance mechanism might involve other ribosomal components rather than the C-terminal end of P proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Lectin (calreticulin [CRT])-N-glycan-mediated quality control of glycoprotein folding is operative in trypanosomatid protozoa but protein-linked monoglucosylated N-glycans are exclusively formed in these microorganisms by UDP-Glc:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase (GT)-dependent glucosylation. The gene coding for this enzyme in the human pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi was identified and sequenced. Even though several of this parasite glycoproteins have been identified as essential components of differentiation and mammalian cell invasion processes, disruption of both GT-encoding alleles did not affect cell growth rate of epimastigote form parasites and only partially affected differentiation and mammalian cell invasion. The cellular content of one of the already identified T. cruzi glycoprotein virulence factors (cruzipain, a lysosomal proteinase) only showed a partial (5-20%) decrease in GT null mutants in spite of the fact that >90% of all cruzipain molecules interacted with CRT during their folding process in wild-type cells. Although extremely mild cell lysis and immunoprecipitation procedures were used, no CRT-cruzipain interaction was detected in GT null mutants but secretion of the proteinase was nevertheless delayed because of a lengthened interaction with Grp78/BiP probably caused by the detected induction of this chaperone in GT null mutants. This result provides a rationale for the absence of a more drastic consequence of GT absence. It was concluded that T. cruzi endoplasmic reticulum folding machinery presents an exquisite plasticity that allows the parasite to surmount the absence of the glycoprotein-specific folding facilitation mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The relative roles of acetate and leucine in the provision of a carbon source for fatty acid and sterol biosynthesis in several trypanosomatid species were investigated using 14C- and 13C-labelled acetate, glucose and leucine as substrates. Promastigotes of Leishmania species synthesized a large proportion of their sterol from leucine. L. major (LV39), L. amazonensis and L. mexicana were the most efficient utilizers of leucine, producing at least 70-77% of their sterol from leucine; L. braziliensis, L. donovani and L. tropica apparently produced less sterol from leucine (23-36%) and L. major (LV561), L. adleri and L. panamamensis were intermediate, utilizing leucine to provide 51-58% of their sterol. In all the cases the balance of the sterol produced was apparently synthesized from carbon arising from acetate. The related trypanosomatid Endotrypanum monterogeii also produced a large amount (77%) of its sterol from leucine rather than acetate. By contrast Trypanosoma cruzi elaborated only 8% of its sterol from leucine and used acetate far more effectively than the Leishmania species for sterol biosynthesis. The fatty acid moieties of the triacylglycerols and phospholipids were produced from acetate. Leucine was also incorporated into the fatty acids to varying extents in the different organisms showing that leucine can also be metabolized in trypanosomatids to generate acetyl-CoA.  相似文献   

9.
Chagas disease affects about 5 million people across the world. The etiological agent, the intracellular parasite Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi), can be diagnosed using microscopy, serology or PCR based assays. However, each of these methods has their limitations regarding sensitivity and specificity, and thus to complement these existing diagnostic methods, alternate assays need to be developed. It is well documented that several parasite proteins called T. cruzi Excreted Secreted Antigens (TESA), are released into the blood of an infected host. These circulating parasite antigens could thus be used as highly specific biomarkers of T. cruzi infection. In this study, we have demonstrated that, using a SELEx based approach, parasite specific ligands called aptamers, can be used to detect TESA in the plasma of T. cruzi infected mice. An Enzyme Linked Aptamer (ELA) assay, similar to ELISA, was developed using biotinylated aptamers to demonstrate that these RNA ligands could interact with parasite targets. Aptamer L44 (Apt-L44) showed significant and specific binding to TESA as well as T. cruzi trypomastigote extract and not to host proteins or proteins of Leishmania donovani, a related trypanosomatid parasite. Our result also demonstrated that the target of Apt-L44 is conserved in three different strains of T. cruzi. In mice infected with T. cruzi, Apt-L44 demonstrated a significantly higher level of binding compared to non-infected mice suggesting that it could detect a biomarker of T. cruzi infection. Additionally, Apt-L44 could detect these circulating biomarkers in both the acute phase, from 7 to 28 days post infection, and in the chronic phase, from 55 to 230 days post infection. Our results show that Apt-L44 could thus be used in a qualitative ELA assay to detect biomarkers of Chagas disease.  相似文献   

10.
Purine nucleotide biosynthesis was studied in culture forms of Trypanosoma cruzi strain Y, Crithidia deanei (a reduviid trypanosomatid with an endosymbiote) and an aposymbiotic strain of C. deanei (obtained by curing C. deanei with chloramphenicol). Trypanosoma cruzi was found to synthesize purine nucleotides only fring incorporated into both adenine and guanine nucleotides. Similar results were obtained with guanine, indicating that this flagellate has a system for the interconversion of purine nucleotides. Crithidia deanei was able to synthesize purine and pyrimidine nucleotides from glycine ("de novo" pathway) and purine nucleotides from adenine and guanine ("salvage" pathway). Adenine was incorporated into both adenine and guanine nucleotides, while guanine was incorporated into guanine nucleotides only, indicating the presence of a metabolic block at the level of GMP reductase. The aposymbiotic C. deanei strain was unable to utilize glycine for the synthesis of purine nucleotides, although glycine was utilized for synthesizing pyrimidine nucleotides. These results suggest that the endosymbiote is implicated in the de novo purine nucleotide pathway of the C. deanei-endosymbiote complex. The incorporation of adenine and guanine by aposymbiotic C. deanei strain followed a pattern similar to that observed for C. deanei.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The genomes of Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania major have been sequenced, but the phylogenetic relationships of these three protozoa remain uncertain. We have constructed trypanosomatid phylogenies based on genes for glycosomal glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase (gGAPDH) and small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA). Trees based on gGAPDH nucleotide and amino acid sequences (51 taxa) robustly support monophyly of genus Trypanosoma, which is revealed to be a relatively late-evolving lineage of the family Trypanosomatidae. Other trypanosomatids, including genus Leishmania, branch paraphyletically at the base of the trypanosome clade. On the other hand, analysis of the SSU rRNA gene data produced equivocal results, as trees either robustly support or reject monophyly depending on the range of taxa included in the alignment. We conclude that the SSU rRNA gene is not a reliable marker for inferring deep level trypanosome phylogeny. The gGAPDH results support the hypothesis that trypanosomes evolved from an ancestral insect parasite, which adapted to a vertebrate/insect transmission cycle. This implies that the switch from terrestrial insect to aquatic leech vectors for fish and some amphibian trypanosomes was secondary. We conclude that the three sequenced pathogens, T. brucei, T. cruzi and L. major, are only distantly related and have distinct evolutionary histories.  相似文献   

13.
The surface of the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi is covered by a dense coat of mucin-type glycoconjugates, which make a pivotal contribution to parasite protection and host immune evasion. Their importance is further underscored by the presence of >1000 mucin-like genes in the parasite genome. In the present study we demonstrate that one such group of genes, termed TcSMUG L, codes for previously unrecognized mucin-type glycoconjugates anchored to and secreted from the surface of insect-dwelling epimastigotes. These features are supported by the in vivo tracing and characterization of endogenous TcSMUG L products and recombinant tagged molecules expressed by transfected parasites. Besides displaying substantial homology to TcSMUG S products, which provide the scaffold for the major Gp35/50 mucins also present in insect-dwelling stages of the T. cruzi lifecycle, TcSMUG L products display unique structural and functional features, including being completely refractory to sialylation by parasite trans-sialidases. Although quantitative real time-PCR and gene sequencing analyses indicate a high degree of genomic conservation across the T. cruzi species, TcSMUG L product expression and processing is quite variable among different parasite isolates.  相似文献   

14.
Parasites of the order Trypanosomatida are known due to their medical relevance. Despite the progress made in the past decades on understanding the evolution of this group of organisms, there are still many open questions that require robust phylogenetic markers to increase the resolution of trees. Using two known 18S rRNA gene template structures (from Trypanosoma cruzi Chagas, 1909 and Trypanosoma brucei Plimmer and Bradford, 1899), individual 18S rRNA gene secondary structures were predicted by homology modeling. Sequences and their secondary structures, automatically encoded by a 12-letter alphabet (each nucleotide with its three structural states, paired left, paired right, unpaired), were simultaneously aligned. Sequence-structure trees were generated by neighbor joining and/or maximum likelihood. The reconstructed trees allowed us to discuss not only the big picture of trypanosomatid phylogeny but also a comprehensive sampling of trypanosomes evaluated in the context of trypanosomatid diversity. The robust support (bootstrap > 75) for well-known clades and critical branches suggests that the simultaneous use of 18S rRNA sequence and secondary structure data can reconstruct robust phylogenetic trees and can be used by the trypanosomatid research community for future analysis.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) is the mitochondrial genome of trypanosomatids. It consists of a few dozen maxicircles and several thousand minicircles, all catenated topologically to form a two-dimensional DNA network. Minicircles are heterogeneous in size and sequence among species. They present one or several conserved regions that contain three highly conserved sequence blocks. CSB-1 (10?bp sequence) and CSB-2 (8?bp sequence) present lower interspecies homology, while CSB-3 (12?bp sequence) or the Universal Minicircle Sequence is conserved within most trypanosomatids. The Universal Minicircle Sequence is located at the replication origin of the minicircles, and is the binding site for the UMS binding protein, a protein involved in trypanosomatid survival and virulence. Here, we describe the structure and organisation of the kDNA of Trypanosoma copemani, a parasite that has been shown to infect mammalian cells and has been associated with the drastic decline of the endangered Australian marsupial, the woylie (Bettongia penicillata). Deep genomic sequencing showed that T. copemani presents two classes of minicircles that share sequence identity and organisation in the conserved sequence blocks with those of Trypanosoma cruzi and Trypanosoma lewisi. A 19,257?bp partial region of the maxicircle of T. copemani that contained the entire coding region was obtained. Comparative analysis of the T. copemani entire maxicircle coding region with the coding regions of T. cruzi and T. lewisi showed they share 71.05% and 71.28% identity, respectively. The shared features in the maxicircle/minicircle organisation and sequence between T. copemani and T. cruzi/T. lewisi suggest similarities in their process of kDNA replication, and are of significance in understanding the evolution of Australian trypanosomes.  相似文献   

16.
Most Trypanosoma cruzi O-glycans are linked to Thr/Ser residues via N-acetylglucosamine. We report that the mucin-type carcinoma-associated sialyl-Tn antigen (NeuAc-GalNAc-O-Ser/Thr) is expressed by T. cruzi. A specific MAb allowed us to localize the antigen on the surface of epimastigotes and to identify reactive components in parasite lysates (32, 60, and 94kDa). In addition, ppGalNAc-T activity was characterized in epimastigotes, and direct evidence was obtained for the in vitro incorporation of GalNAc to a synthetic peptide derived from a T. cruzi mucin. These results add an as yet unknown complexity to the pathways of O-glycan biosynthesis in this protozoan parasite.  相似文献   

17.
Clyne T  Kinch LN  Phillips MA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(44):13207-13216
S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a pyruvoyl-dependent enzyme that is processed from a single polypeptide into two subunits creating the cofactor. In the human enzyme, both the proenzyme processing reaction and enzyme activity are stimulated by the polyamine putrescine. The processing reaction of Trypanosoma cruzi AdoMetDC was studied in an in vitro translation system. The enzyme was fully processed in the absence of putrescine, and the rate of this reaction was not stimulated by addition of the polyamine. Residues in the putrescine binding site of the human enzyme were evaluated for their role in processing of the T. cruzi enzyme. The E15A, I80K/S178E, D174A, and E256A mutant T. cruzi enzymes were fully processed. In contrast, mutation of R13 to Leu (the equivalent residue in the human enzyme) abolished processing of the T. cruzi enzyme, demonstrating that Arg at position 13 is a major determinant for proenzyme processing in the parasite enzyme. This amino acid change is a key structural difference that is likely to be a factor in the finding that putrescine has no role in processing of the T. cruzi enzyme. In contrast, the activity of T. cruzi AdoMetDC is stimulated by putrescine. Equilibrium sedimentation experiments demonstrated that putrescine does not alter the oligomeric state of the enzyme. The putrescine binding constant for binding to the T. cruzi enzyme (K(d) = 150 microM) was measured by a fluorescence assay and by ultrafiltration with a radiolabeled ligand. The mutant T. cruzi enzyme D174V no longer binds putrescine, and is not activated by the diamine. In contrast, mutation of E15, S178, E256, and I80 had no effect on putrescine binding. The k(cat)/K(m) values for E15A and E256A mutants were stimulated by putrescine to a smaller extent than the wild-type enzyme (2- and 4-fold vs 11-fold, respectively). These data suggest that the putrescine binding site on the T. cruzi enzyme contains only limited elements (D174) in common with the human enzyme and that the diamine plays different roles in the function of the mammalian and parasite enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
19.
In a 17-kb genomic fragment of Trypanosoma cruzi chromosome XX, we identified three tandemly linked genes coding for CX(2)CX(4)HX(4)C zinc finger proteins. We also showed that similar genes are present in T. brucei and Leishmania major, sharing three monophyletic groups among these trypanosomatids. In T. cruzi, TcZFP8 corresponds to a novel gene coding for a protein containing eight zinc finger motifs. Molecular cloning of this gene and heterologous expression as a fusion with a His-tag were performed in Escherichia coli. The purified recombinant protein was used to produce antibody in rabbits. Using Western blot analysis, we observed the presence of this protein in all three forms of the parasite: amastigote, trypomastigote and epimastigote. An analysis of cytoplasmic and nuclear cell extracts showed that this protein is present in nuclear extracts, and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy confirmed the nuclear localization of TcZFP8. Homologues of TcZFP8 in T. brucei are apparently absent, while one candidate in L. major was identified.  相似文献   

20.
Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHOD) is the fourth enzyme in the de novo pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway and is essential in Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasitic protist causing Chagas' disease. T. cruzi and human DHOD have different biochemical properties, including the electron acceptor capacities and cellular localization, suggesting that T. cruzi DHOD may be a potential chemotherapeutic target against Chagas' disease. Here, we report nucleotide sequence polymorphisms of T. cruzi DHOD genes and the kinetic properties of the recombinant enzymes. T. cruzi Tulahuen strain possesses three DHODgenes: DHOD1 and DHOD2, involved in the pyrimidine biosynthetic (pyr) gene cluster on an 800 and a 1000 kb chromosomal DNA, respectively, and DHOD3, located on an 800 kb DNA. The open reading frames of all three DHOD genes are comprised of 942 bp, and encode proteins of 314 amino acids. The three DHOD genes differ by 26 nucleotides, resulting in replacement of 8 amino acid residues. In contrast, all residues critical for constituting the active site are conserved among the three proteins. Recombinant T. cruzi DHOD1 and DHOD2 expressed in E. coli possess similar enzymatic properties, including optimal pH, optimal temperature, Vmax, and Km for dihydroorotate and fumarate. In contrast, DHOD3 had a higher Vmax and Km for both substrates. Orotate competitively inhibited all three DHOD enzymes to a comparable level. These results suggest that, despite their genetic variations, kinetic properties of the three T. cruziDHODs are conserved. Our findings facilitate further exploitation of T. cruzi DHOD inhibitors, as chemotherapeutic agents against Chagas' disease.  相似文献   

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