Artigo
Trypanosoma cruzi 175-kDa protein tyrosine phosphorylation is associated with host cell invasion
Fecha
1998-06-01Registro en:
Experimental Parasitology. San Diego: Academic Press Inc, v. 89, n. 2, p. 188-194, 1998.
0014-4894
10.1006/expr.1998.4285
WOS:000074135600006
Autor
Favoreto, S.
Dorta, M. L.
Yoshida, N.
Institución
Resumen
We examined the requirement of Trypanosoma cruzi protein tyrosine phosphorylation for parasite entry into mammalian cells and analyzed the profile of phosphorylated proteins in infective trypomastigotes. Treatment of metacyclic or tissue culture trypomastigotes with genistein, an inhibitor of protein tyrosine kinase activity, significantly inhibited invasion of cultured HeLa cells. A soluble factor, contained in HeLa cell extract and absent in the extract or T. cruzi-resistant K562 cells, greatly enhanced phosphorylation levels of a 175-kDa protein (p175) in trypomastigotes. Genistein inhibited p175 tyrosine phosphorylation. P175 was undetectable in noninvasive epimastigotes. the phosphorylation-inducing activity of HeLa cell extract was abrogated by adsorption with metacyclic trypomastigotes but not with epimastigotes or when it was mixed with recombinant protein Jig, which contains the entire peptide sequence of gp82, a metacyclic stage-specific surface glycoprotein implicated in target cell invasion. These data suggest ttl;it. in metacyclic trypomastigotes, gp82 is the signaling receptor that mediates protein tyrosine phosphorylation necessary for host cell invasion. (C) 1998 Academic Press.