The polyamine pathway of protozoan parasites has been successfully targeted in anti-parasitic therapies and is significantly different from that of the mammalian host. To gain knowledge into the metabolic routes by which parasites synthesize polyamines and their precursors, the arginase gene was cloned from Leishmania mexicana, and ⌬arg null mutants were created by double targeted gene replacement and characterized. The ARG sequence exhibited significant homology to ARG proteins from other organisms and predicted a peroxisomal targeting signal (PTS-1) that steers proteins to the glycosome, an organelle unique to Leishmania and related parasites. ARG was subsequently demonstrated to be present in the glycosome, whereas the polyamine biosynthetic enzymes, in contrast, were shown to be cytosolic. The ⌬arg knockouts expressed no ARG activity, lacked an intracellular ornithine pool, and were auxotrophic for ornithine or polyamines. The ability of the ⌬arg null mutants to proliferate could be restored by pharmacological supplementation, either with low putrescine or high ornithine or spermidine concentrations, or by complementation with an arginase episome. Transfection of an arg construct lacking the PTS-1 directed the synthesis of an arg that mislocalized to the cytosol and notably also complemented the genetic lesion and restored polyamine prototrophy to the ⌬arg parasites. This molecular, biochemical, and genetic dissection of ARG function in L. mexicana promastigotes establishes: (i) that the enzyme is essential for parasite viability; (ii) that Leishmania, unlike mammalian cells, expresses only one ARG activity; (iii) that the sole vital function of ARG is to provide polyamine precursors for the parasite; and (iv) that ARG is present in the glycosome, but this subcellular milieu is not essential for its role in polyamine biosynthesis.
Urinary telomerase had the highest combination of sensitivity and specificity (70 and 99%, respectively) for bladder cancer screening in these patients. It was the strongest predictor with superior accuracy in patients with grade 1 and noninvasive tumors (pTa), and extremely useful in patients with carcinoma in situ. Telomerase appears to be promising and outperformed cytology, BTA stat, NMP22, FDP, chemiluminescent hemoglobin and hemoglobin dipstick in the prediction of bladder cancer.
a b s t r a c tIn-situ irradiations with 150 keV W þ ions have been performed on W and W-5wt.% (Re; Ta; V) alloys in a comprehensive study of the influences of irradiation temperature T irr , dose, alloying elements and grain orientations on radiation damage production and microstructural evolution. For T irr between 30 K and 1073 K, the first observable defects in pure W appeared at doses 0.01 dpa, and were most likely vacancy loops, with Burgers vectors predominantly of type b ¼ ½ <111>. With increasing T irr , the retained defect concentration decreased strongly and the maximum cluster size increased from~1300 point defects at 30 K to~2300 point defects at 1073 K. At all irradiation temperatures, the evolution of damage microstructures with dose from 0.1 to 1.0 dpa involved defect cluster migration, with mutual elastic interactions often leading to spatial inhomogeneities and loop reactions. In pure W, spatial ordering of loops was observed at doses >0.4 dpa and T irr ! 773 K in grains close to z ¼ <001>. No such ordering was found in similar grain orientations for the W-(Re; Ta) alloys, but it was found in the non-z ¼ <001> grains. Post-irradiation analysis on W and W-5 wt% (Re; Ta) at 1.0 dpa showed that ½ <111> and <100> loops of both vacancy and interstitial type were present, at number densities~10 15 loops m À2 . In all cases ½ <111> loops were dominant, the fraction of these with interstitial nature increased with T irr , and the proportion of <100> loops decreased with increasing T irr . Compared with pure W, microstructures in the W-(Re; Ta) alloys exhibited higher loop number densities and evolved more quickly with increasing dose towards damage saturation.
A knockout strain of Leishmania donovani lacking both ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) alleles has been created by targeted gene replacement. Growth of ⌬odc cells in polyamine-deficient medium resulted in a rapid and profound depletion of cellular putrescine pools, although levels of spermidine were relatively unaffected. Concentrations of trypanothione, a spermidine conjugate, were also reduced, whereas glutathione concentrations were augmented. The ⌬odc L. donovani exhibited an auxotrophy for polyamines that could be circumvented by the addition of the naturally occurring polyamines, putrescine or spermidine, to the culture medium. Whereas putrescine supplementation restored intracellular pools of both putrescine and spermidine, exogenous spermidine was not converted back to putrescine, indicating that spermidine alone is sufficient to meet the polyamine requirement, and that L. donovani does not express the enzymatic machinery for polyamine degradation. The lack of a polyamine catabolic pathway in intact parasites was confirmed radiometrically. In addition, the ⌬odc strain could grow in medium supplemented with either 1,3-diaminopropane or 1,5-diaminopentane (cadaverine), but polyamine auxotrophy could not be overcome by other aliphatic diamines or spermine. These data establish genetically that ODC is an essential gene in L. donovani, define the polyamine requirements of the parasite, and reveal the absence of a polyamine-degradative pathway.Polyamines are cationic compounds that play essential roles in cell proliferation, differentiation, and macromolecular synthesis (1-3). Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) 1 catalyzes the conversion of ornithine to putrescine (1,4-diaminobutane) and is the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis in most organisms (4). The ODC enzyme of protozoan parasites is a novel therapeutic target, because D,L-␣-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO; eflornithine), an irreversible inhibitor of ODC (5), exhibits notable efficacy against the central nervous system phase of African sleeping sickness caused by Trypanosoma brucei gambiense (3, 6). DFMO is also active against T. b. rhodesiense and T. congolense in murine models and has proven effective against other genera of protozoan parasites in vivo and in vitro, including Plasmodia (7), Giardia (8), and Leishmania (9). DFMO has been shown to induce a lethal polyamine depletion in both T. brucei (10) and L. donovani (9), the etiologic agent of visceral leishmaniasis, and toxicity to both species is ameliorated by polyamine addition (3, 9).The ability of trypanosomatids to undergo a very high frequency of homologous recombination allows the disruption of chromosomal loci with transfected drug resistance cassettes (11,12) and permits a direct test of gene function. This enables the creation of conditionally lethal parasite strains whose survival and ability to propagate are dependent upon the provision of compounds that can ameliorate the consequences of the genetic lesion. This genetic approach is predicated on the availability of c...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.