Trypanosoma cruzi Arginine Kinase Characterization and Cloning

This work contains the first description of a guanidino kinase in a flagellar unicellular parasite. The enzyme phosphorylates l-arginine and was characterized in preparations from Trypanosoma cruzi, the ethiological agent of Chagas' disease. The activity requires ATP and a divalent cation. Unde...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2000-01, Vol.275 (2), p.1495-1501
Hauptverfasser: Pereira, Claudio A., Alonso, Guillermo D., Paveto, M.Cristina, Iribarren, Adolfo, Cabanas, M.Laura, Torres, Héctor N., Flawiá, Mirtha M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This work contains the first description of a guanidino kinase in a flagellar unicellular parasite. The enzyme phosphorylates l-arginine and was characterized in preparations from Trypanosoma cruzi, the ethiological agent of Chagas' disease. The activity requires ATP and a divalent cation. Under standard assay conditions (1 mm l-arginine), the presence of 5-fold higher concentrations of canavanine or histidine produced a greater than 50% enzyme inhibition. The base sequence of this enzyme revealed an open reading frame of 357 amino acids and a molecular weight of 40,201. The amino acid sequence shows all of the characteristic consensus blocks of the ATP:guanidino phosphotransferase family and a putative “actinin-type” actin-binding domain. The highest amino acid identities of the T. cruzi sequence, about 70%, were with arginine kinases from Arthropoda. Southern and chromosome blots revealed that the kinase is encoded by a single-copy gene. Moreover, Northern blot analysis showed an mRNA subpopulation of about 2.0 kilobases, and Western blotting of T. cruzi-soluble polypeptides revealed a 40-kDa band. The finding in the parasite of a phosphagen and its biosynthetic pathway, which are totally different from those in mammalian host tissues, points out this arginine kinase as a possible chemotherapy target for Chagas' disease.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.275.2.1495