| Literature DB >> 26694921 |
Youn-Kyoung Goo1, Junya Yamagishi2, Akio Ueno3, Mohamad Alaa Terkawi4, Gabriel Oluga Aboge5, Dongmi Kwak6, Yeonchul Hong7, Dong-Il Chung8, Makoto Igarashi9, Yoshifumi Nishikawa10, Xuenan Xuan11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The glyoxalase pathway, which includes two enzymes, glyoxalase 1 and 2 (Glo1 and Glo2), is a ubiquitous cellular system responsible for the removal of cytotoxic methylglyoxal produced during glycolysis. Protozoan parasites, including Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) tachyzoites, produce methylglyoxal because of increased glycolytic fluxes. A Glo1 inhibitor such as curcumin could be considered a drug candidate for anti-protozoan, anti-inflammatory, and anti-cancer therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26694921 PMCID: PMC4688987 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-015-1268-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Primers used for amplification of TgGlo1 gene and generation of point mutations of TgGlo1
| Gene | Primer | Sequence |
|---|---|---|
| TgGlo1 | Forward | 5′-GGGGAATTCATGTCCAGAAGTTTGCCC-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-GGGAAGCTTTTACTTCTTTGAAAGGAACG-3′ | |
| E92Q | Forward | 5′-GGGACGTGCTTGCAACTCACTCACAATC-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-GATTGTGAGTGAGTTGCAAGCACGTCCC-3′ | |
| E166Q | Forward | 5′-GGATACTGGATACAATTGGTTTCTCGG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CCGAGAAACCAATTGTATCCAGTATCC-3′ | |
| R188E | Forward | 5′-CAGACGATGATTGAAATCAAAGATCCG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CGGATCTTTGATCCGAATCATCGTCTG-3′ | |
| E251Q | Forward | 5′-CAGCCTGTATTACAACTCACACACAATCAC-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-GTGATTGTGTGTGAGTTGTAATACAGGCTG-3′ | |
| E324Q | Forward | 5′-GGATATAGCATCCAACTGATTCAG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CTGAATCAGTTGGATGCTATATCC-3′ |
Fig. 1Immunofluorescence microscopy analysis. The specific reaction of the rTgGlo1 and mouse anti-rTgGlo1 serum is green and the nuclei are red. Merged image of fluorescent green reactivity and red PI staining of nuclei with phase-contrast images of the parasites
Fig. 2Steady-state kinetics of wild-type rTgGlo1 and five mutants, E92Q, E166Q, R188E, E251Q, and E166Q/E251Q. Measurements are expressed as the mean of three independent experiments. The values for wild-type rTgGlo1, E92Q, and R188E were obtained from two phases (phase 1, 1/[S] = less than 40 μM; phase 2, 1/[S] = greater than 40 μM)
Enzyme kinetics of recombinant TgGlo1 proteins: a wild type and mutants produced by point-mutagenesis on active sites of TgGlo1
| E92Q | R188E | rTgGlo1 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Phase 2 | E166Q | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | E251Q | E166Q /E251Q | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | |
| Km (μM) | 11 ± 2.1 | 42 ± 5.2 | 173 ± 8.0 | 14 ± 2.3 | 42 ± 2.1 | 94 ± 3.2 | 190 ± 5.2 | 10.0 ± 0.6 | 38.6 ± 1.5 |
| Kcat (s−1) | 159 ± 16 | 76 ± 9 | 93 ± 4 | 654 ± 12 | 254 ± 20 | 100 ± 17 | 114 ± 9 | 1305 ± 38 | 257 ± 11 |
(Phase 1, 1/[S] = less than 40 μM; Phase 2, 1/[S] = more than 40 μM)
Fig. 3Inhibition of TgGlo1 enzymatic activity and parasite growth of T. gondii by curcumin. a Inhibitory effects of curcumin on steady-kinetics of rTgGlo1. The purified rTgGlo1 was incubated with decreasing concentrations of curcumin and enzymatic activity was recorded. Enzymatic activity of rTgGlo1 decreased in a dose-dependent manner after treatment with curcumin. b Curcumin inhibition study in T. gondii cultures. T. gondii propagation was inhibited with concentrations of curcumin higher than 5 μM. c Curcumin inhibition study in dose–response experiments with T. gondii. Proliferation of T. gondii was decreased in a dose-dependent manner after treatment with curcumin