Structural bases that underline trypanosoma cruzi calreticulin proinfective, antiangiogenic and antitumor properties
Author
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Peña Álvarez, Jaime
Author
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Teneb, Jaime
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Maldonado Fuentes, Ismael
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Weinberger Stange, Katherine
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Rosas Chuñil, Carlos
Author
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Lemus Acuña, David
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Valck Calderón, Carolina
Author
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Olivera Nappa, Álvaro
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Asenjo de Leuze, Juan
Author
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Ferreira Vigouroux, Luis Arturo
Admission date
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2020-05-18T22:21:19Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2020-05-18T22:21:19Z
Publication date
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2020
Cita de ítem
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Immunobiology 225 (2020) 151863
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1016/j.imbio.2019.10.012
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/174812
Abstract
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Microbes have developed mechanisms to resist the host immune defenses and some elicit antitumor immune responses. About 6 million people are infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, the protozoan agent of Chagas' disease, the sixth neglected tropical disease worldwide. Eighty years ago, G. Roskin and N. Klyuyeva proposed that T. cruzi infection mediates an anti-cancer activity. This observation has been reproduced by several other laboratories, but no molecular basis has been proposed. We have shown that the highly pleiotropic chaperone calreticulin (TcCalr, formerly known as TcCRT), translocates from the parasite ER to the exterior, where it mediates infection. Similar to its human counterpart HuCALR (formerly known as HuCRT), TcCalr inhibits C1 in its capacity to initiate the classical pathway of complement activation. We have also proposed that TcCalr inhibits angiogenesis and it is a likely mediator of antitumor effects. We have generated several in silico structural TcCalr models to delimit a peptide (VC-TcCalr) at the TcCalr N-domain. Chemically synthesized VC-TcCalr did bind to C1q and was anti-angiogenic in Gallus gallus chorioallantoic membrane assays. These properties were associated with structural features, as determined in silico. VC-TcCalr, a strong dipole, interacts with charged proteins such as collagen-like tails and scavenger receptors. Comparatively, HuCALR has less polarity and spatial stability, probably due to at least substitutions of Gln for Gly, Arg for Lys, Arg for Asp and Ser for Arg that hinder protein-protein interactions. These differences can explain, at least in part, how TcCalr inhibits the complement activation pathway and has higher efficiency as an antiangiogenic and antitumor agent than HuCALR.
es_ES
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
Chilean Public Grants from FONDECYT-CHILE
1130099
1141311
CONICYT PIA Basal Funding for Excellence Scientific and Technological Centers
CeBiB FB0001
VID-Universidad de Chile
Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT)