Pneumocystis causes a type of pneumonia in immunodeficient mammals, such as AIDS patients. Mammals cannot alkylate the C-24 position of the sterol side chain, nor can they desaturate C-22. Thus, the reactions leading to these sterol modifications are particularly attractive targets for the development of drugs against fungal and protozoan pathogens that make them. In the present study, the definitive structures of 43 sterol molecular species in rat-derived Pneumocystis carinii were elucidated by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Ergosterol, ⌬ 5,7 sterols, trienes, and tetraenes were not among them. Most (32 of the 43) were 24-alkylsterols, products of S -adenosyl-L -methionine:C-24 sterol methyl transferase (SAM:SMT) enzyme activity. Their abundance is consistent with the suggestion that SAM:SMT is highly active in this organism and that the enzyme is an excellent anti-Pneumocystis drug target. In contrast, the comprehensive analysis strongly suggest that P. carinii does not form ⌬ 22 sterols, thus C-22 desaturation does not appear to be a drug target in this pathogen. The lanosterol derivatives, 24-methylenelanost-8-en-3  -ol and ( Z )-24-ethylidenelanost-8-en-3  -ol (pneumocysterol), previously identified in human-derived Pneumocystis jiroveci , were also detected among the sterols of the rat-derived P. carinii organisms. Pneumocystis pneumonia (PcP) remains among the most prevalent opportunistic infections in immunocompromised individuals such as AIDS patients. It has becoming evident that the high incidence of PcP in AIDS patients is global and that the organism can infect other immunodeficient people such as patients undergoing chemotherapy for cancer or solid organ transplant (1, 2), children prior to becoming fully immunocompetent, and the elderly with diminished immune systems. Pneumocystis can also transiently colonize normal, healthy people and animals without causing overt symptoms of respiratory disorder. The combination of trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole and other agents (e.g., pentamidine, atovaquone) used for prophylaxis and for clearing PcP has successfully reduced the number of deaths directly attributed to PcP. However, AIDS and other patients with prolonged immunodeficiency experience recurrent Pneumocystis jiroveci ( Pneumocystis carinii f. sp. hominis ) (3, 4) infections. Also, some individuals cannot tolerate these drugs and suffer undesirable side effects. The development of drug-resistant pathogen populations is of serious concern, making it imperative to develop a larger armamentarium of diverse drugs to circumvent these problems (5 Ϫ 7). Although the organism can be maintained in long-term, small-volume axenic cultures (8), growth is very slow and insufficient numbers of organisms are obtained for most biochemical studies. Thus, Pneumocystis remains an organism considered difficult to manipulate for experimental work. Despite this difficulty, much is now known about the organism's lipids from analyses performed on preparations purified from infected rat lungs (9 Ϫ 11...
Pneumocysterol [(24Z)-ethylidenelanost-8-en-3-ol], a rare sterol detected in the opportunistic pathogenCommunicated by William Trager, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, November 2, 1998 (received for review February 4, 1998 ABSTRACTPneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PcP) remains among the most prevalent opportunistic infections among AIDS patients. Currently, drugs used clinically for deep mycosis act by binding ergosterol or disrupting its biosynthesis. Although classified as a fungus, P. carinii lacks ergosterol. Instead, the pathogen synthesizes a number of distinct ⌬ 7 , 24-alkylsterols, despite the abundance of cholesterol, which it can scavenge from the lung alveolus. Thus, the pathogen-specific sterols appear vital for organism survival and proliferation. In the present study, high concentrations of a C 32 sterol were found in humanderived P. carinii hominis. The definitive structural identities of two C-24 alkylated lanosterol compounds, previously not reported for rat-derived P. carinii carinii, were determined by using GLC, MS, and NMR spectroscopy together with the chemical syntheses of authentic standards. The C 31 and C 32 sterols were identified as euphorbol (24-methylenelanost-8-en-3-ol) and pneumocysterol [(24Z)-ethylidenelanost-8-en-3-ol], respectively. The identification of these and other 24-alkylsterols in P. carinii hominis suggests that (i) sterol C-24 methyltransferase activities are extraordinarily high in this organism, (ii) 24-alkylsterols are important components of the pathogen's membranes, because the addition of these side groups onto the sterol side chain requires substantial ATP equivalents, and (iii) the inefficacy of azole drugs against P. carinii can be explained by the ability of this organism to form 24-alkysterols before demethylation of the lanosterol nucleus. Because mammals cannot form 24-alkylsterols, their biosyntheses in P. carinii are attractive targets for the development of chemotherapeutic strategies against this opportunistic infection.Sterols and their biosyntheses are excellent targets for chemotherapeutic attack against infectious microbes, especially the fungi. Polyene antibiotics such as amphotericin B bind avidly to ergosterol in fungal cell membranes. After the sterol-drug complexes aggregate, large pores in the membranes are formed, dissipating ion gradients. Fluconazole and some other compounds routinely used clinically for systemic mycosis target ergosterol biosynthesis at nuclear demethylation steps. Ergosterol was not detected in Pneumocystis carinii carinii that was isolated and purified from the lungs of corticosteroid-immunosuppressed rats. In this respect, the pathogen appears to be unlike higher fungi. However, the organism synthesizes its own distinct sterols, e.g., fungisterol (24-methylcholest-7-en-3-ol and 24-ethylcholest-7-en-3-ol; refs. 1-4). Parasites generally scavenge sterols (e.g., cholesterol) from the host and utilize them for membrane formation and other cell functions. If host sterols do not fulfill the precise stereochemi...
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