antimony-sodium-gluconate and trypanothione

antimony-sodium-gluconate has been researched along with trypanothione* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for antimony-sodium-gluconate and trypanothione

ArticleYear
Role of the ABC transporter MRPA (PGPA) in antimony resistance in Leishmania infantum axenic and intracellular amastigotes.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2005, Volume: 49, Issue:5

    Antimonial compounds are the mainstay for the treatment of infections with the protozoan parasite Leishmania. We present our studies on Leishmania infantum amastigote parasites selected for resistance to potassium antimonyl tartrate [Sb(III)]. Inside macrophages, the Sb(III)-selected cells are cross-resistant to sodium stibogluconate (Pentostam), the main drug used against Leishmania. Putative alterations in the level of expression of more than 40 genes were compared between susceptible and resistant axenic amastigotes using customized DNA microarrays. The expression of three genes coding for the ABC transporter MRPA (PGPA), S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase, and folylpolyglutamate synthase was found to be consistently increased. The levels of cysteine were found to be increased in the mutant. Transfection of the MRPA gene was shown to confer sodium stibogluconate resistance in intracellular parasites. This MRPA-mediated resistance could be reverted by using the glutathione biosynthesis-specific inhibitor buthionine sulfoximine. These results highlight for the first time the role of MRPA in antimony resistance in the amastigote stage of the parasite and suggest a strategy for reversing resistance.

    Topics: Animals; Antimony; Antimony Sodium Gluconate; ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters; Cell Line; Cysteine; DNA, Protozoan; Drug Resistance; Glutathione; Leishmania infantum; Membrane Glycoproteins; Microscopy, Confocal; Monocytes; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis; Protozoan Proteins; Ribonucleoproteins; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins; Spermidine; Transfection

2005
Trypanothione overproduction and resistance to antimonials and arsenicals in Leishmania.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1996, Sep-17, Volume: 93, Issue:19

    Leishmania resistant to arsenicals and antimonials extrude arsenite. Previous results of arsenite uptake into plasma membrane-enriched vesicles suggested that the transported species is a thiol adduct of arsenite. In this paper, we demonstrate that promastigotes of arsenite-resistant Leishmania tarentolae have increased levels of intracellular thiols. High-pressure liquid chromatography of the total thiols showed that a single peak of material was elevated almost 40-fold. The major species in this peak was identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry as N1,N8-bis-(glutathionyl)spermidine (trypanothione). The trypanothione adduct of arsenite was effectively transported by the As-thiol pump. No difference in pump activity was observed in wild type and mutants. A model for drug resistance is proposed in which Sb(V)/As(V)-containing compounds, including the antileishmanial drug Pentostam, are reduced intracellularly to Sb(III)/As(III), conjugated to trypanothione, and extruded by the As-thiol pump. The rate-limiting step in resistance is proposed to be formation of the metalloid-thiol pump substrates, so that increased synthesis of trypanothione produces resistance. Increased synthesis of the substrate rather than an increase in the number of pump molecules is a novel mechanism for drug resistance.

    Topics: Animals; Antimony Sodium Gluconate; Antiprotozoal Agents; Arsenic Poisoning; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Cysteine; Drug Resistance; Glutathione; Leishmania; Models, Biological; Mutation; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization; Spermidine

1996