Characterization of the ornithine aminotransferase from Plasmodium falciparum.

Article Details

Citation

Gafan C, Wilson J, Berger LC, Berger BJ

Characterization of the ornithine aminotransferase from Plasmodium falciparum.

Mol Biochem Parasitol. 2001 Nov;118(1):1-10.

PubMed ID
11704268 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The ornithine aminotransferase from Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 was cloned, functionally expressed, and characterized. The gene exists as a single copy in the malarial genome and is located on chromosomes 6/7/8. The deduced amino acid sequence was found to be 85% identical to a similar sequence discovered in Plasmodium yoelii, 82% identical to a partial sequence from Plasmodium vivax, and 42-53% identical to ornithine aminotransferases from other eukaryotes. The enzyme had a very narrow substrate specificity, and could only catalyze the transamination of alpha-ketoglutarate with ornithine or N-acetylornithine, and of glutamate-5-semialdehyde with glutamate and alanine. The aminooxy analogue of ornithine, canaline, was found to inhibit the ornithine aminotransferase uncompetatively with a Ki of 492+/-98 nM. As the enzyme effectively catalyzed both ornithine catabolism and formation, its potential role in ornithine biosynthesis from glutamine, via glutamate, glutamate-5-phosphate, and glutamate-5-semialdehyde, was examined. Over the course of a 3.5 h incubation, P. falciparum converted 34% of exogenous, radiolabeled glutamine to glutamate and 0.68% to ornithine. This low level of conversion suggests that the parasite may have alternative mechanisms for obtaining ornithine for polyamine biosynthesis.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Ornithine aminotransferaseQ6LFH8Details