Sialidase (EC: 3.2.1.18) from Trypanosoma vivax (Agari Strain) was isolated from bloodstream forms of the parasite and purified to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity. The enzyme was purified 77-fold with a yield of 32% and co-eluted as a 66-kDa protein from a Sephadex G 110 column. The T. vivax sialidase was optimally active at 37 degrees C with an activation energy (E(a)) of 26.2 kJ mole(-1). The pH activity profile was broad with optimal activity at 6.5. The enzyme was activated by dithiothreitol and strongly inhibited by para-hydroxy mercuricbenzoate thus implicating a sulfhydryl group as a possible active site residue of the enzyme. Theenzyme hydrolysed Neu5Ac2,3lac and fetuin. It was inactive towards Neu5Ac2,6lac, colomic acid and the gangliosides GM1, and GDI. Initial velocity studies, for the determination of kinetic constants with fetuin as substrate gave a V(max) of 142.86 micromol h(-1) mg(-1) and a K(M) of 0.45 mM. The K(M) and V(max) with Neu5Ac-2,3lac were 0.17 mM and 840 micromole h(-1) mg(-1) respectively. The T. vivax sialidase was inhibited competitively by both 2,3 dideoxy neuraminic acid (Neu5Ac2,3en) and para-hydroxy oxamic acid. When ghost RBCs were used as substrates, the enzyme desialylated the RBCs from camel, goat, and zebu bull. The RBCs from dog, mouse and ndama bull were resistant to hydrolysis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbf.1189 | DOI Listing |
Front Cell Infect Microbiol
January 2022
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kangwon National University School of Medicine, Chuncheon, South Korea.
Sci Rep
August 2017
Fundación Instituto de Inmunología de Colombia (FIDIC), Carrera 50 # 26-20, Bogotá, Colombia.
The malarial parasite's invasion is complex, active and coordinated, involving many low and high affinity interactions with receptors on target cell membrane. Proteomics analysis has described around 40 proteins in P. vivax which could be involved in reticulocyte invasion; few have been studied with the aim of elucidating how many of them establish specific interactions with their respective host cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
January 2016
The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia; Department of Medical Biology, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia;
Acta Crystallogr F Struct Biol Commun
May 2015
Structural Biology Research Center (SBRC), VIB, Pleinlaan 2, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
Sialidases and trans-sialidases play important roles in the life cycles of various microorganisms. These enzymes can serve nutritional purposes, act as virulence factors or mediate cellular interactions (cell evasion and invasion). In the case of the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma vivax, trans-sialidase activity has been suggested to be involved in infection-associated anaemia, which is the major pathology in the disease nagana.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Pathog
May 2014
French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), Université Bordeaux Segalen, Microbiologie fondamentale et Pathogénicité, UMR 5234, Bordeaux, France.
Understanding African Trypanosomiasis (AT) host-pathogen interaction is the key to an "anti-disease vaccine", a novel strategy to control AT. Here we provide a better insight into this poorly described interaction by characterizing the activation of a panel of endothelial cells by bloodstream forms of four African trypanosome species, known to interact with host endothelium. T.
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