Identification of Toxoplasma gondii cAMP dependent protein kinase and its role in the tachyzoite growth

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Abstract

Background: cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) has been implicated in the asexual stage of the Toxoplasma gondii life cycle through assaying the effect of a PKA-specific inhibitor on its growth rate. Since inhibition of the host cell PKA cannot be ruled out, a more precise evaluation of the role of PKA, as well as characterization of the kinase itself, is necessary. Methodology/Principal Finding: The inhibitory effects of two PKA inhibitors, H89, an ATP-competitive chemical inhibitor, and PKI, a substrate-competitive mammalian natural peptide inhibitor, were estimated. In the in vitro kinase assay, the inhibitory effect of PKI on a recombinant T. gondii PKA catalytic subunit (TgPKA-C) was weaker compared to that on mammalian PKA-C. In a tachyzoite growth assay, PKI had little effect on the growth of tachyzoites, whereas H89 strongly inhibited it. Moreover, T. gondii PKA regulatory subunit (TgPKA-R)-overexpressing tachyzoites showed a significant growth defect. Conclusions/Significance: Our data suggest that PKA plays an important role in the growth of tachyzoites, and the inhibitory effect of substrate-competitive inhibitor PKI on T. gondii PKA was low compared to that of the ATP competitive inhibitor H89. © 2011 Kurokawa et al.

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Kurokawa, H., Kato, K., Iwanaga, T., Sugi, T., Sudo, A., Kobayashi, K., … Akashi, H. (2011). Identification of Toxoplasma gondii cAMP dependent protein kinase and its role in the tachyzoite growth. PLoS ONE, 6(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022492

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