Abstract

The glutathione reductases (GR) from two cattle filariae ( Setaria digitata and Onchocerca gutturosa) have been isolated and their properties have been compared to those of human erythrocyte GR. In general, the enzymes appear to be very similar with respect to substrate-specificity for glutathione disulfide and NADPH, molecular mass (97 kDa vs. 98 kDa) and oligomeric organisation (subunit size of 51 kDa vs. 50 kDa). However, studies on the inhibition of the enzymes by the trivalent melaminophenyl arsenical melarsen oxide revealed that the human GR is less susceptible to inhibition by the arsenical than the filarial enzymes. Further, it was found that the mechanism of inactivation differs for the host and filarial enzymes. The human enzyme is inhibited by melarsen oxide in a competitive manner with a K i of 23.7 μM, whereas the filarial GRs are inhibited in two stages: an immediate partial inactivation followed by a time-dependent stage with saturable pseudo-first-order kinetics. K i values for the S. digitata and O. gutturosa GRs are 38.3 μM and 4.5 μM, respectively, with maximum second-stage inactivation rates of 1.0 × 10 −4 s −1 and 24.3 × 10 −4 s −1, respectively. These differences between host and parasite enzyme might reflect differences in the primary and secondary structure of the proteins which might be exploitable for the design of new specific macrofilaricidal drugs.

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