Flores M V, Atkins D, Wade D, O'Sullivan W J, Stewart T S
School of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, Australia.
J Biol Chem. 1997 Jul 4;272(27):16940-5. doi: 10.1074/jbc.272.27.16940.
Catalytic RNA (ribozymes) suppressed the growth of the human malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. The phosphorothioated hammerhead ribozymes targeted unique regions of the P. falciparum carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase II gene. The P. falciparum carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase II gene encodes the first and limiting enzyme in the pathway, and its mRNA transcript contains two large insert regions absent in other carbamoyl-phosphate synthetases, including that from humans. These inserts are ideal targets for nucleic acid therapy. Exogenous delivery of ribozymes to cultures reduced malarial viability up to 55% at 0.5 microM ribozyme concentrations, which is significantly greater than control levels (5-15% reduction), suggesting a sequence-specific inhibition. This inhibition was shown to be stage-specific, with optimal inhibitions being detected after 24 h, coincident with maximal production of the carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase enzyme in the course of the life cycle of the parasite. A decrease in total carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase activity was observed only in cultures treated with the ribozymes. The task of developing alternative therapeutic agents against malaria is urgent due to the evolution of drug-resistant strains of P. falciparum, the most virulent of all human malarial parasites. Another critical issue to be addressed is the possibility of eliminating or reducing any systemic toxicity to the host, which can potentially be provided by nucleic acid therapy. This work is the first reported assessment of the ability of ribozymes as antimalarials. Ribozyme inhibition assays can also aid in identifying important antimalarial loci for chemotherapy. The malarial parasite can, in turn, be a useful in vivo host to study the catalysis and function of new ribozyme designs.
催化性RNA(核酶)在体外抑制了人类疟原虫恶性疟原虫的生长。硫代磷酸化锤头状核酶靶向恶性疟原虫氨甲酰磷酸合成酶II基因的独特区域。恶性疟原虫氨甲酰磷酸合成酶II基因编码该途径中的首个且起限制作用的酶,其mRNA转录本包含两个大的插入区域,这在包括人类氨甲酰磷酸合成酶在内的其他氨甲酰磷酸合成酶中不存在。这些插入区域是核酸治疗的理想靶点。向培养物中外源递送核酶,在核酶浓度为0.5微摩尔时,可将疟疾活力降低达55%,这显著高于对照水平(降低5 - 15%),表明存在序列特异性抑制。这种抑制表现为阶段特异性,在24小时后检测到最佳抑制效果,这与寄生虫生命周期中氨甲酰磷酸合成酶的最大产量一致。仅在用核酶处理的培养物中观察到氨甲酰磷酸合成酶总活性的下降。由于恶性疟原虫(所有人类疟原虫中最具毒性的)耐药菌株的进化,开发抗疟疾替代治疗药物的任务迫在眉睫。另一个需要解决的关键问题是消除或降低对宿主的任何全身毒性的可能性,核酸治疗可能会带来这种毒性。这项工作是首次报道的对核酶作为抗疟药物能力的评估。核酶抑制试验也有助于识别化疗的重要抗疟基因座。反过来,疟原虫可以成为研究新核酶设计的催化作用和功能的有用体内宿主。