Giardia intestinalis is the etiological agent of giardiasis, a common human intestinal disease with 280 million cases per year. Giardiasis is typically treated with the broad-range antibiotic metronidazole; however, the emergence of drug-resistant strains calls for the development of new anti-parasitic drugs. Very little is known regarding the molecular mechanisms adopted by Giardia to cope with the oxidative/nitrosative environmental stress, encountered by the parasite during colonization of the human intestine. Giardia is particularly sensitive to oxidative stress, as it lacks some of the most common ROS-detoxifying enzymes and it is endowed with O 2-labile key metabolic enzymes. Surprisingly, it colonizes a fairly aerobic (up to 50 ?M O 2) tract of the human gut (the upper part of the small intestine). Accordingly, survival of the parasite relies on antioxidant systems, though, as yet, the only two H 2O-forming and O 2-consuming enzymes described in Giardia are NADH oxidase and flavodiiron protein (FDP). Nitric oxide (NO) is an antimicrobial agent produced, together with ROS, by the host immune system to fight pathogens. In vitro NO-stress has been reported to have cytostatic, rather than cytotoxic, effects on Giardia. This effect leads to the suggestion that Giardia is endowed with defense mechanisms against NO and, very recently, the NO-detoxifying flavohemoglobin from it has been characterized.

Enzymatic detoxification of O2 and NO in the human parasite, Giardia intestinalis: A mini review

Giuffrè A;Mastronicola D;
2011

Abstract

Giardia intestinalis is the etiological agent of giardiasis, a common human intestinal disease with 280 million cases per year. Giardiasis is typically treated with the broad-range antibiotic metronidazole; however, the emergence of drug-resistant strains calls for the development of new anti-parasitic drugs. Very little is known regarding the molecular mechanisms adopted by Giardia to cope with the oxidative/nitrosative environmental stress, encountered by the parasite during colonization of the human intestine. Giardia is particularly sensitive to oxidative stress, as it lacks some of the most common ROS-detoxifying enzymes and it is endowed with O 2-labile key metabolic enzymes. Surprisingly, it colonizes a fairly aerobic (up to 50 ?M O 2) tract of the human gut (the upper part of the small intestine). Accordingly, survival of the parasite relies on antioxidant systems, though, as yet, the only two H 2O-forming and O 2-consuming enzymes described in Giardia are NADH oxidase and flavodiiron protein (FDP). Nitric oxide (NO) is an antimicrobial agent produced, together with ROS, by the host immune system to fight pathogens. In vitro NO-stress has been reported to have cytostatic, rather than cytotoxic, effects on Giardia. This effect leads to the suggestion that Giardia is endowed with defense mechanisms against NO and, very recently, the NO-detoxifying flavohemoglobin from it has been characterized.
2011
Istituto di Biologia e Patologia Molecolari - IBPM
antibiotic agent
arginine
cystathionine gamma lyase
cysteine
flavodiiron protein
flavohemoglobin
flavoprotein
hemoglobin derivative
hydrogen peroxide
membrane protein
metronidazole
nitazoxanide
nitric oxide
nitroreductase
oxygen
protozoal protein
reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase
rubredoxin
unclassified drug
amino terminal sequence
antibiotic resistance
article
bacterial colonization
bacterial metabolism
carboxy terminal sequence
citric acid cycle
down regulation
electron transport
energy metabolism
enzyme activity
enzyme mechanism
Giardia lamblia
human
intestine epithelium cell
nitrosative stress
nonhuman
oxidative stress
protein degradation
protein domain
pr
reduction
trophozoite
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/192412
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