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1.
Leishmania major, like all the other kinetoplastid protozoa, are unable to synthesize purines and rely on purine nucleobase and nucleoside acquisition across the parasite plasma membrane by specific permeases. Although, several genes have been cloned that encode nucleoside transporters in Leishmania and Trypanosoma brucei, much less progress has been made on nucleobase transporters, especially at the molecular level. The studies reported here have cloned and expressed the first gene for a L. major nucleobase transporter, designated LmaNT3. The LmaNT3 permease shows 33% identity to L. donovani nucleoside transporter 1.1 (LdNT1.1) and is, thus, a member of the equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) family. ENT family members identified to date are nucleoside transporters, some of which also transport one or several nucleobases. Functional expression studies in Xenopus laevis oocytes revealed that LmaNT3 mediates high levels of uptake of hypoxanthine, xanthine, adenine and guanine. Moreover, LmaNT3 is an high affinity transporter with K(m) values for hypoxanthine, xanthine, adenine and guanine of 16.5 +/- 1.5, 8.5 +/- 0.6, 8.5 +/- 1.1, and 8.8 +/- 4.0 microM, respectively. LmaNT3 is, thus, the first member of the ENT family identified in any organism that functions as a nucleobase rather than nucleoside or nucleoside/nucleobase transporter.  相似文献   

2.
Nucleoside and nucleobase transporters are important for salvage of purines and pyrimidines and for transport of their analog drugs into cells. However, the pathways for nucleobase translocation in mammalian cells are not well characterized. We identified an Na-independent purine-selective nucleobase/nucleoside transport system in the nucleoside transporter-deficient PK15NTD cells. This transport system has 1,000-fold higher affinity for nucleobases than nucleosides with K(m) values of 2.5 +/- 0.7 microM for [(3)H]adenine, 6.4 +/- 0.5 microM for [(3)H]guanine, 1.1 +/- 0.1 mM for [(3)H]guanosine, and 4.2 +/- 0.5 mM [(3)H]adenosine. The uptake of [(3)H]guanine (0.05 microM) was inhibited by other nucleobases and nucleobase analog drugs (at 0.5-1 mM in the order of potency): 6-mercaptopurine = thioguanine = guanine > adenine > thymine = fluorouracil = uracil. Cytosine and methylcytosine had no effect. Nucleoside analog drugs with modification at 2' and/or 5 positions (all at 1 mM) were more potent than adenosine in competing the uptake of [(3)H]guanine: 2-chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine > 2-chloroadenosine > 2'3'-dideoxyadenosine = 2'-deoxyadenosine > 5-deoxyadenosine > adenosine. 2-Chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine and 2-chloroadenosine inhibited [(3)H]guanine uptake with IC(50) values of 68 +/- 5 and 99 +/- 10 microM, respectively. The nucleobase/nucleoside transporter was resistant to nitrobenzylthioinosine {6-[(4-nitrobenzyl) thiol]-9-beta-D-ribofuranosylpurine}, dipyridamole, and dilazep, but was inhibited by papaverine, the organic cation transporter inhibitor decynium-22 (IC(50) of approximately 1 microM), and by acidic pH (pH = 5.5). In conclusion, we have identified a mammalian purine-selective nucleobase/nucleoside transporter with high affinity for purine nucleobases. This transporter is potentially important for transporting naturally occurring purines and purine analog drugs into cells.  相似文献   

3.
Parasitic protozoa are unable to synthesize purines de novo and must import preformed purine nucleobases or nucleosides from their hosts. Leishmania major expresses two purine nucleobase transporters, LmaNT3 and LmaNT4. Previous studies revealed that at neutral pH, LmaNT3 is a broad specificity, high affinity nucleobase transporter, whereas LmaNT4 mediates the uptake of only adenine. Because LmaNT4 is required for optimal viability of the amastigote stage of the parasite that lives within acidified phagolysomal vesicles of mammalian macrophages, the function of this permease was examined under acidic pH conditions. At acidic pH, LmaNT4 acquires the ability to transport adenine, hypoxanthine, guanine, and xanthine with Km values in the micromolar range, indicating that this transporter is activated at low pH. Thus, LmaNT4 is an acid-activated purine nucleobase transporter that functions optimally under the physiological conditions the parasite is exposed to in the macrophage phagolysosome. In contrast, LmaNT3 functions optimally at neutral pH. Two-electrode voltage clamp experiments performed on LmaNT3 and LmaNT4 expressed in Xenopus oocytes revealed substrate-induced inward directed currents at acidic pH, and application of substrates induced acidification of the oocyte cytosol. These observations imply that LmaNT3 and LmaNT4 are nucleobase/proton symporters.Leishmania species are parasitic protozoa that infect humans and animals and cause a spectrum of diseases in tropical and subtropical regions of the world (1). The life cycle consists of three principal stages: flagellated promastigotes that colonize the midgut of the sand fly vector, metacyclic promastigotes that live in the mouth parts of the sand fly and are infectious to mammalian hosts, and non-flagellated amastigotes that reside within acidified phagolysosomal vesicles of vertebrate host macrophages.Like all other parasitic protozoa examined, Leishmania species are unable to synthesize the purine ring de novo and must import purines from both the insect and mammalian hosts (2). Salvage of these essential nutrients is initiated by uptake of nucleobases and nucleosides across the parasite plasma membrane by permeases of the ENT (equilibrative nucleoside transporter) family (SLC29 family). The Leishmania major genome (3) encodes five members of this family, NT1.1, NT1.2, and NT2, which are nucleoside transporters (4, 5), and NT3 and NT4, which are purine nucleobase permeases (6, 7). Previous functional characterization of LmaNT3 (Lma indicates that the transporter is from L. major) revealed that it mediates the uptake of hypoxanthine, adenine, guanine, and xanthine with Km values in the low micromolar range (6). In contrast, at neutral pH, LmaNT4 promotes the uptake of only adenine. Nonetheless, studies with the Δlmant4-null mutant (7) revealed that LmaNT4 was essential for optimal viability of L. major amastigotes in primary murine macrophages. In contrast, deletion of the LmaNT3 genes in the Δlmant3-null mutant was without effect on amastigote viability inside macrophages.Because amastigotes are exposed to a pH of ∼5 in the macrophage phagolysosome (8), one potential explanation for the compromised viability of Δlmant4 amastigotes is that LmaNT4 operates optimally at acidic pH. In this case, deletion of the LmaNT4 genes would reduce the ability of amastigotes to salvage purines within the phagolysosome and would compromise their viability. If, in contrast, the LmaNT3 permease functions optimally at neutral pH, amastigotes could tolerate the loss of this transporter more easily, explaining the unaltered viability of Δlmant3 amastigotes. To test this possibility, we have studied the function of both LmaNT4 and LmaNT3 at both acidic and neutral pH. Indeed, LmaNT4, but not LmaNT3, is an acid-activated nucleobase transporter, implying that it functions optimally under the physiological conditions of the macrophage phagolysosome.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii depends upon salvaging the purines that it requires. We have re-analysed purine transport in T. gondii and identified novel nucleoside and nucleobase transporters. The latter transports hypoxanthine (TgNBT1; K(m)=0.91+/-0.19 microM) and is inhibited by guanine and xanthine: it is the first high affinity nucleobase transporter to be identified in an apicomplexan parasite. The previously reported nucleoside transporter, TgAT1, is low affinity with K(m) values of 105 and 134 microM for adenosine and inosine, respectively. We have now identified a second nucleoside transporter, TgAT2, which is high affinity and inhibited by adenosine, inosine, guanosine, uridine and thymidine (K(m) values 0.28-1.5 microM) as well as cytidine (K(i)=32 microM). TgAT2 also recognises several nucleoside analogues with therapeutic potential. We have investigated the basis for the broad specificity of TgAT2 and found that hydrogen bonds are formed with the 3' and 5' hydroxyl groups and that the base groups are bound through H-bonds with either N3 of the purine ring or N(3)H of the pyrimidine ring, and most probably pi-pi-stacking as well. The identification of these high affinity purine nucleobase and nucleoside transporters reconciles for the first time the low abundance of free nucleosides and nucleobases in the intracellular environment with the efficient purine salvage carried out by T. gondii.  相似文献   

6.
Leishmania cannot synthesize purines de novo and rely on their host to furnish these compounds. To accomplish this, they possess multiple purine nucleoside and nucleobase transporters. Subcellular fractionation, immunohistochemical localization with anti-adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT) antibodies and surface biotinylation show that the mitochondrial ANT is also present in the plasma membrane of both promastigotes and amastigotes. Leishmania, however, do not appear to rely on this transporter to supplement their purine or energy requirements via preformed ATP from its host. Rather, Leishmania appear to use the plasma membrane ANT as part of a chemotaxis response. ATP is a chemorepellant for Leishmania and cells treated with atractyloside, an inhibitor of ANT, no longer exhibit negative chemotaxis for this compound.  相似文献   

7.
Plasmodium falciparum is incapable of de novo purine biosynthesis, and is absolutely dependent on transporters to salvage purines from the environment. Only one low-affinity adenosine transporter has been characterized to date. In the present study we report a comprehensive study of purine nucleobase and nucleoside transport by intraerythrocytic P. falciparum parasites. Isolated trophozoites expressed (i) a high-affinity hypoxanthine transporter with a secondary capacity for purine nucleosides, (ii) a separate high-affinity transporter for adenine, (iii) a low-affinity adenosine transporter, and (iv) a low-affinity/high-capacity adenine carrier. Hypoxanthine was taken up with 12-fold higher efficiency than adenosine. Using a parasite clone with a disrupted PfNT1 (P. falciparum nucleoside transporter 1) gene we found that the high-affinity hypoxanthine/nucleoside transport activity was completely abolished, whereas the low-affinity adenosine transport activity was unchanged. Adenine transport was increased, presumably to partly compensate for the loss of the high-affinity hypoxanthine transporter. We thus propose a model for purine salvage in P. falciparum, based on the highly efficient uptake of hypoxanthine by PfNT1 and a high capacity for purine nucleoside uptake by a lower affinity carrier.  相似文献   

8.
Levels of cardiovascular active metabolites, like adenosine, are regulated by nucleoside transporters of endothelial cells. We characterized the nucleoside and nucleobase transport capabilities of primary human cardiac microvascular endothelial cells (hMVECs). hMVECs accumulated 2-[3H]chloroadenosine via the nitrobenzylmercaptopurine riboside-sensitive equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1 (ENT1) at a V(max) of 3.4 +/- 1 pmol.microl(-1).s(-1), with no contribution from the nitrobenzylmercaptopurine riboside-insensitive ENT2. Inhibition of 2-chloroadenosine uptake by ENT1 blockers produced monophasic inhibition curves, which are also compatible with minimal ENT2 expression. The nucleobase [3H]hypoxanthine was accumulated within hMVECs (K(m) = 96 +/- 37 microM; V(max) = 1.6 +/- 0.3 pmol.microl(-1).s(-1)) despite the lack of a known nucleobase transport system. This novel transporter was dipyridamole-insensitive but could be inhibited by adenine (K(i) = 19 +/- 7 microM) and other purine nucleobases, including chemotherapeutic analogs. A variety of other cell types also expressed the nucleobase transporter, including the nucleoside transporter-deficient PK(15) cell line (PK15NTD). Further characterization of [3H]hypoxanthine uptake in the PK15NTD cells showed no dependence on Na(+) or H(+). PK15NTD cells expressing human ENT2 accumulated 4.5-fold more [3H]hypoxanthine in the presence of the ENT2 inhibitor dipyridamole than did PK15NTD cells or hMVECs, suggesting trapping of ENT2-permeable metabolites. Understanding the nucleoside and nucleobase transporter profiles in the vasculature will allow for further study into their roles in pathophysiological conditions such as hypoxia or ischemia.  相似文献   

9.
Purine nucleoside and nucleobase transporters are of fundamental importance for Trypanosoma brucei and related kinetoplastid parasites because these protozoa are not able to synthesize purines de novo and must salvage the compounds from their hosts. In the studies reported here, we have identified a family of six clustered genes in T. brucei that encode nucleoside/nucleobase transporters. These genes, TbNT2/927, TbNT3, TbNT4, TbNT5, TbNT6, and TbNT7, have predicted amino acid sequences that show high identity to each other and to TbNT2, a P1 type nucleoside transporter recently identified in our laboratory. Expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes revealed that TbNT2/927, TbNT5, TbNT6, and TbNT7 are high affinity adenosine/inosine transporters with K(m) values of <5 microm. In addition, TbNT5, and to a limited degree TbNT6 and TbNT7, also mediate the uptake of the nucleobase hypoxanthine. Ribonuclease protection assays showed that mRNA from all of the six members of this gene family are expressed in the bloodstream stage of the T. brucei life cycle but that TbNT2/927 and TbNT5 mRNAs are also expressed in the insect stage of the life cycle. These results demonstrate that T. brucei expresses multiple purine transporters with distinct substrate specificities and different patterns of expression during the parasite life cycle.  相似文献   

10.

Background

Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas' disease is unable to synthesise its own purines and relies on salvage from the host. In other protozoa, purine uptake has been shown to be mediated by Equilibrative Nucleoside Transporters (ENTs).

Methods

To investigate the functionality of T. cruzi-encoded ENT transporters, its four putative ENT genes (TcrNB1, TcrNB2, TcrNT1 and TcrNT2) were cloned and expressed in genetically adapted Trypanosoma brucei procyclic cells from which the nucleobase transporter locus was deleted.

Results

TcrNB1 displayed very high affinity for hypoxanthine (Km 93.8?±?4.7?nM for) and guanine, and moderate affinity for adenine. TcrNT1 was found to be a high-affinity guanosine/inosine transporter (inosine Km is 1.0?±?0.03?μM; guanosine Ki is 0.92?±?0.2?μM). TcrNT2 encoded a high-affinity thymidine transporter (Km?=?223.5?±?7.1?nM) with a clear preference for 2’-deoxypyrimidines. TcrNB2, whose activity could not be determined in our system, could be a low-affinity purine nucleobase transporter, given its sequence and predicted structural similarities to Leishmania major NT4. All 4 transporter genes were highly expressed in the amastigote forms, with much lower expression in the non-dividing stages.

Conclusions

The data appear to show that, surprisingly, T. cruzi has a preference for oxopurines over aminopurines and efficiently transports 2′-deoxypyrimidines. The T. cruzi ENTs display exceptionally high substrate affinity as an adaptation to their intracellular localisation.

General significance

This study reports the first cloning of T. cruzi purine and pyrimidine transporters, including the first gene encoding a pyrimidine-selective protozoan transporter.  相似文献   

11.
Miller EF  Vaish S  Maier RJ 《PloS one》2012,7(6):e38727
The ability to synthesize and salvage purines is crucial for colonization by a variety of human bacterial pathogens. Helicobacter pylori colonizes the gastric epithelium of humans, yet its specific purine requirements are poorly understood, and the transport mechanisms underlying purine uptake remain unknown. Using a fully defined synthetic growth medium, we determined that H. pylori 26695 possesses a complete salvage pathway that allows for growth on any biological purine nucleobase or nucleoside with the exception of xanthosine. Doubling times in this medium varied between 7 and 14 hours depending on the purine source, with hypoxanthine, inosine and adenosine representing the purines utilized most efficiently for growth. The ability to grow on adenine or adenosine was studied using enzyme assays, revealing deamination of adenosine but not adenine by H. pylori 26695 cell lysates. Using mutant analysis we show that a strain lacking the gene encoding a NupC homolog (HP1180) was growth-retarded in a defined medium supplemented with certain purines. This strain was attenuated for uptake of radiolabeled adenosine, guanosine, and inosine, showing a role for this transporter in uptake of purine nucleosides. Deletion of the GMP biosynthesis gene guaA had no discernible effect on mouse stomach colonization, in contrast to findings in numerous bacterial pathogens. In this study we define a more comprehensive model for purine acquisition and salvage in H. pylori that includes purine uptake by a NupC homolog and catabolism of adenosine via adenosine deaminase.  相似文献   

12.
Malaria, caused by Plasmodia parasites, affects hundreds of millions of people. As purine auxotrophs, Plasmodia use transporters to import host purines for subsequent metabolism by the purine salvage pathway. Thus purine transporters are attractive drug targets. All sequenced Plasmodia genomes encode four ENTs (equilibrative nucleoside transporters). During the pathogenic intraerythrocytic stages, ENT1 is a major route of purine nucleoside/nucleobase transport. Another plasma membrane purine transporter exists because Plasmodium falciparum ENT1-knockout parasites survive at supraphysiological purine concentrations. The other three ENTs have not been characterized functionally. Codon-optimized Pf- (P. falciparum) and Pv- (Plasmodium vivax) ENT4 were expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes and substrate transport was determined with radiolabelled substrates. ENT4 transported adenine and 2'-deoxyadenosine at the highest rate, with millimolar-range apparent affinity. ENT4-expressing oocytes did not accumulate hypoxanthine, a key purine salvage pathway substrate, or AMP. Micromolar concentrations of the plant hormone cytokinin compounds inhibited both PfENT4 and PvENT4. In contrast with PfENT1, ENT4 interacted with the immucillin compounds in the millimolar range and was inhibited by 10?μM dipyridamole. Thus ENT4 is a purine transporter with unique substrate and inhibitor specificity. Its role in parasite physiology remains uncertain, but is likely to be significant because of the strong conservation of ENT4 homologues in Plasmodia genomes.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT. Giardia lamblia is dependent on the salvage of preformed purines and pyrimidines. This study investigated purine nucleoside and nucleobase transport utilizing rapid uptake determinations. Nucleoside substrate/velocity curves exhibited the hyperbolic kinetics of a saturable carrier-mediated system. Deoxynucleosides exhibited a much lower affinity for the transporter. Inhibition studies confirmed the relative camer affinities of these ribonucleosides and deoxyribonucleosides. The nucleobase adenine did not exhibit saturation lunetics at a comparable substrate range, and did not inhibit nucleoside transport. Dipyridamole markedly inhibited nucleoside but not nucleobase transport, confirming the separate entry pathways. When cells were depleted of ATP, the velocity of nucleoside and nucleobase transport was unchanged, indicating that it is a non-energy-dependent process. Three nucleoside analogs, formycin A, adenine arabinoside and 7–deazaadenosine, were studied. Transport kinetics ranged widely among this group and could not completely account for their cytotoxic effect. When the apparent Km and Vmax of the nucleosides were compared, an approximately linear relationship (r2= 0.95) was noted. This suggests that a high affinity of the nucleoside permease for the substrate retards disassociation of the substrate-carrier complex, slowing net influx.  相似文献   

14.
The therapeutic index of antimetabolites such as purine analogues is in large part determined by the extent to which it is selectively accumulated by the target cell. In the current study we have compared the transport of purine nucleobase analogues by the H2 transporter of bloodstream form Trypanosoma brucei brucei and the equilibrative nucleobase transporter of human erythrocytes. The H2 transporter forms hydrogen bonds with hypoxanthine at positions N3, N7, N(1)H, and N(9)H of the purine ring, with apparent Delta G(0) of 7.7-12.6 kJ/mol. The transporter also appears to H-bond with the amine group of adenine. The human transporter forms hydrogen bonds that form to (6)NH(2) and N1 of adenine. An H-bond is also formed with N3 and the 6-keto and amine groups of guanine but not with the protonated N1, thus explaining the low affinity for hypoxanthine. N7 and N9 do not directly interact with the human transporter in the form of H-bonds, and it is proposed that pi-pi stacking interactions contribute significantly to permeant binding. The potential for selective uptake of antimetabolites by the parasite transporter was demonstrated.  相似文献   

15.
NCS1 proteins are H+ or Na+ symporters responsible for the uptake of purines, pyrimidines or related metabolites in bacteria, fungi and some plants. Fungal NCS1 are classified into two evolutionary and structurally distinct subfamilies, known as Fur‐ and Fcy‐like transporters. These subfamilies have expanded and functionally diversified by gene duplications. The Fur subfamily of the model fungus Aspergillus nidulans includes both major and cryptic transporters specific for uracil, 5‐fluorouracil, allantoin or/and uric acid. Here we functionally analyse all four A. nidulans Fcy transporters (FcyA, FcyC, FcyD and FcyE) with previously unknown function. Our analysis shows that FcyD is moderate‐affinity, low‐capacity, highly specific adenine transporter, whereas FcyE contributes to 8‐azaguanine uptake. Mutational analysis of FcyD, supported by homology modelling and substrate docking, shows that two variably conserved residues (Leu356 and Ser359) in transmembrane segment 8 (TMS8) are critical for transport kinetics and specificity differences among Fcy transporters, while two conserved residues (Phe167 and Ser171) in TMS3 are also important for function. Importantly, mutation S359N converts FcyD to a promiscuous nucleobase transporter capable of recognizing adenine, xanthine and several nucleobase analogues. Our results reveal the importance of specific residues in the functional evolution of NCS1 transporters.  相似文献   

16.
The evolutionarily broad family nucleobase-cation symporter-2 (NCS2) encompasses transporters that are conserved in binding site architecture but diverse in substrate selectivity. Putative purine transporters of this family fall into one of two homology clusters: COG2233, represented by well studied xanthine and/or uric acid permeases, and COG2252, consisting of transporters for adenine, guanine, and/or hypoxanthine that remain unknown with respect to structure-function relationships. We analyzed the COG2252 genes of Escherichia coli K-12 with homology modeling, functional overexpression, and mutagenesis and showed that they encode high affinity permeases for the uptake of adenine (PurP and YicO) or guanine and hypoxanthine (YjcD and YgfQ). The two pairs of paralogs differ clearly in their substrate and ligand preferences. Of 25 putative inhibitors tested, PurP and YicO recognize with low micromolar affinity N6-benzoyladenine, 2,6-diaminopurine, and purine, whereas YjcD and YgfQ recognize 1-methylguanine, 8-azaguanine, 6-thioguanine, and 6-mercaptopurine and do not recognize any of the PurP ligands. Furthermore, the permeases PurP and YjcD were subjected to site-directed mutagenesis at highly conserved sites of transmembrane segments 1, 3, 8, 9, and 10, which have been studied also in COG2233 homologs. Residues irreplaceable for uptake activity or crucial for substrate selectivity were found at positions occupied by similar role amino acids in the Escherichia coli xanthine- and uric acid-transporting homologs (XanQ and UacT, respectively) and predicted to be at or around the binding site. Our results support the contention that the distantly related transporters of COG2233 and COG2252 use topologically similar side chain determinants to dictate their function and the distinct purine selectivity profiles.  相似文献   

17.
Parasitic protozoa are unable to synthesise purines de novo and thus depend on the uptake of nucleosides and nucleobases across their plasma membrane through specific transporters. A number of nucleoside and nucleobase transporters from Trypanosoma brucei brucei and Leishmania major have recently been characterised and shown to belong to the equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) family. A number of studies have demonstrated the functional importance of particular transmembrane segments (TMS) in nucleoside-specific ENT proteins. TbNBT1, one of only three bona fide nucleobase-selective members of the ENT family, has previously been shown to be a high-affinity transporter for purine nucleobases and guanosine. In this study, we use the Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression system to build a biochemical model of how TbNBT1 recognises nucleobases. We next performed random in vitro and site-directed mutagenesis to identify residues critical for TbNBT1 function. The identification of residues likely to contribute to permeant binding, when combined with a structural model of TbNBT1 obtained by homology threading, yield a tentative three-dimensional model of the transporter binding site that is consistent with the binding model emerging from the biochemical data. The model strongly suggests the involvement of TMS5, TMS7 and TMS8 in TbNBT1 function. This situation is very similar to that concerning transporters of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS), one of which was used as a template for the threading. This point raises the possibility that ENT and MFS carriers, despite being considered evolutionarily distinct, might in fact share similar topologies and substrate translocations pathways.  相似文献   

18.
While multiple nucleoside transporters, some of which can also transport nucleobases, have been cloned in recent years from many different organisms, no sequence information is available for the high affinity, nucleobase-selective transporters of metazoa, parazoa, or protozoa. We have identified a gene, TbNBT1, from Trypanosoma brucei brucei that encodes a 435-residue protein of the equilibrative nucleoside transporter superfamily. The gene was expressed in both the procyclic and bloodstream forms of the organism. Expression of TbNBT1 in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain lacking an endogenous purine transporter allowed growth on adenine as sole purine source and introduced a high affinity transport activity for adenine and hypoxanthine, with Km values of 2.1 +/- 0.6 and 0.66 +/- 0.22 microm, respectively, as well as high affinity for xanthine, guanine, guanosine, and allopurinol and moderate affinity for inosine. A transporter with an indistinguishable kinetic profile was identified in T. b. brucei procyclics and designated H4. RNA interference of TbNBT1 in procyclics reduced cognate mRNA levels by approximately 80% and H4 transport activity by approximately 90%. Expression of TbNBT1 in Xenopus oocytes further confirmed that this gene encodes the first high affinity nucleobase transporter from protozoa or animals to be identified at the molecular level.  相似文献   

19.
A glucose transporter null mutant of the parasitic protozoan Leishmania mexicana , in which three linked glucose transporter genes have been deleted by targeted gene replacement, is unable to replicate as amastigote forms within phagolysomes of mammalian host macrophages and is avirulent. Spontaneous suppressors of the null mutant have been isolated that partially restore replication of parasites within macrophages. These suppressor mutants have amplified the gene for an alternative hexose transporter, the LmGT4 permease (previously called the D2 permease), on a circular extrachromosomal element, and they overexpress LmGT4 mRNA and protein. The suppressors have also regained the ability to transport hexoses, and they have reverted other phenotypes of the null mutant exhibiting enhanced resistance to oxidative killing, heat shock and starvation for nutrients, as well as augmented levels of the storage carbohydrate β-mannan, increased cell size and increased growth as insect stage promastigotes compared with the unsuppressed mutant. Complementation of the null mutant with the LmGT4 gene on a multicopy episomal expression vector also reverted these phenotypes, confirming that suppression results from amplification of the LmGT4 gene. These results underscore the importance of hexose transporters for the infectious stage of the parasite life cycle.  相似文献   

20.
An 8-azaguanine-resistant mutant, azg-11, derived from a guanine auxotroph, gua-1, of Salmonella typhimurium was isolated. This mutant was resistant to the analogue when grown on 2,6-diaminopurine, but showed greater susceptibility than the parent on guanine. Studies with the uptake of radioactive purines revealed that the mutant was defective in a mechanism for incorporation of guanine as well as of xanthine. Initial rates of uptake were determined for guanine at concentrations which were sufficiently low to make permeases limiting. The affinity constant K(m) for the mutant was found to be 2.5 x 10(-4)m; that of the parent was 2.3 x 10(-5)m. Examination of cell-free extracts suggested that the purine nucleotide pyrophosphorylases, responsible for the conversion of free intracellular purines to the corresponding nucleotides, were present and unaltered. The results indicate that the mutant is defective in a mechanism for the active transport for guanine and possibly xanthine.  相似文献   

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