4.5 Article

Pyroglutamyl peptidase type I from Trypanosoma brucei:: a new virulence factor from African trypanosomes that de-blocks regulatory peptides in the plasma of infected hosts

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BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
卷 394, 期 -, 页码 635-645

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PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20051593

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African trypanosome; aminopeptidase; gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH); hypothyroidism; pyroglutamyl peptidase (PGP) type I; thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH)

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Peptidases of parasitic protozoans are emerging as novel virulence factors and therapeutic targets in parasitic infections. A trypanosome-derived aminopeptidase that exclusively hydrolysed substrates with Glp (pyroglutamic acid) in P-1 was purified 9248-fold from the plasma of rats infected with Trypanosoma brucei brucei. The enzyme responsible was cloned from a T. brucei brucei genomic DNA library and identified as type I PGP (pyroglutamyl peptidase), belonging to the C15 family of cysteine peptidases. We showed that PGP is expressed in all life cycle stages of T brucei brucei and is expressed in four other bloodstream-form African trypanosomes. Trypanosome PGP was optimally active and stable at blood-stream form African trypnosomes. We showed that PGP is expressed in all life cycle stages of T. brucei brucei and is expressed in four other blood-stream-form Africian trypanosomes. Trypanonsomes PGP was optimally active and stable at bloodstream pH, and was insensitive to host plasma cysteine peptidase inhibitors. Native purified and recombinant hyper-expressed trypanosome PGP removed the N-terminal Glp blocking groups from TRH (thyrotrophin-releasing hormone) and GnRH (gonadotropin-releasing hormone) with a k(cal)/K-m value of 0.5 and 0.1 s(-1) center dot mu M-1 respectively. The half-life of TRH and GnRH was dramatically reduced in the plasma of trypanosome-infected rats, both in vitro and in vivo. Employing an activity-neutralizing anti-trypano some PGP antibody, and pyroglutamyl diazomethyl ketone, a specific inhibitor of type I PGP, we demonstrated that trypanosome PGP is entirely responsible for the reduced plasma half-life of TRH, and partially responsible for the reduced plasma half-life of GnRH in a rodent model of African trypanosomiasis. The abnormal degradation of TRH and GnRH, and perhaps other neuropeptides N-terminally blocked with a pyroglutamyl moiety, by trypanosome PGP, may contribute to some of the endocrine lesions observed in African trypanosomiasis.

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