N-Phosphorylated guanidino compounds, commonly referred to as phosphagens, play a critical role as an energy reserve because of the high energy phosphate that can be transferred when the renewal of ATP is needed. It has also been proposed that these compounds function in spatial buffering of cellular energy production sites. So, phosphagens act as reserves not only of ATP but also of inorganic phosphate, which is mostly returned to the medium by metabolic consumption of ATP. Phosphoarginine is the main reserve of high energy phosphate compounds in a wide variety of invertebrates. In addition phosphocreatine, phosphoglycocyamine, phosphotaurocyamine, phosphohypotaurocyamine, phosphoopheline, and phospholombricine are also found, whereas in vertebrates the only one present is phosphocreatine (1, 2).Arginine kinase (EC 2.7.3.3) is a member of a conserved family of phosphotransferases which also includes creatine kinase. These enzymes catalyze the reversible transfer of a phosphoryl group from ATP to a guanidino acceptor, which can be either an amino acid (e.g. lombricine or arginine) or a carboxylate (e.g. creatine or glycocyamine; Reaction 1).
A very specific L-arginine transporter showing high affinity has been characterized in Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes. Uptake was found to be dependent on L-arginine concentration and it was saturable. Values for maximum velocity and Km ranged between 48.1-57.5 pmol.min-1 per 3 x 10(7) cells and between 4.2-5.5 microM, respectively. The calculated activation energy and Q10 were 31.1 KJ.mol-1, and 1.7, respectively. Uptake velocity significantly increased when cells were preincubated in the absence of L-arginine. Cells retained the labeled amino acid independently of the presence or absence of exogenous L-arginine. The specificity of L-arginine uptake was demonstrated by competition assays in the presence of 80-fold molar excess of natural amino acids and several L-arginine derivatives. The highest levels of inhibition were caused by L-homoarginine, D-arginine, L-canavanine, L-ornithine, and L-citrulline. L-arginine uptake by T. cruzi epimastigotes was not affected by the presence of potassium or sodium ions in the incubation mixture or by pH changes in the range between 5.5-8.5. The major product of L-arginine uptake was characterized as phosphoarginine. Moreover, arginine kinase activity was detected in soluble extracts from T. cruzi epimastigotes.
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