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Manganese- and zinc-coordinated interaction of Schistosoma japonicum glutathione S-transferase with neurotransmitter transporters GlyT1 and GAT3 in vitro.

Martina Baliova, Frantisek Jursky
Other Experimental parasitology 2024 2 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
In Vitro
Población
In vitro protein interaction study
Intervención
Manganese- and zinc-coordinated interaction of Schistosoma japonicum glutathione S-transferase with neurotransmitter transporters GlyT1 and GAT3 in vitro. Manganese and zinc ions
Comparador
Without metal ions
Resultado primario
GST interaction with neurotransmitter transporters
Dirección del efecto
Neutral
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Abstract

Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) are a family of multifunctional isoenzymes involved in the neutralization of toxic compounds, drug resistance and several other cellular functions. The glutathione S-transferase enzyme of Schistosoma japonicum (SjGST-26) plays a role in human schistosomiasis and is also a frequently used fusion partner in mammalian and bacterial expression and pull-down systems. GSTs seem not to be naturally associated with metal ions. Exceptionally, in vitro, metal binding sites have been previously described in some schistosome GSTs; however, their possible physiological role is unclear. Molecules of several neurotransmitter transporters also contain a regulatory zinc binding site, which affects their transport cycle. Here we show that among several metals, manganese and zinc are able to induce a specific protein interaction of SjGST-26 with the glycine transporter GlyT1 and the GABA transporter GAT3 in vitro. The results suggest that metal-binding sites on SjGST-26 and neurotransmitter transporters might function in metal-coordinated interactions with other metalloproteins. Our results additionally indicate that the presence of metal ions in SjGST-26-based GST protein pull-down assays may lead to a false-positive interaction if the potential interacting target is the metalloprotein.

TL;DR

Among several metals, manganese and zinc are able to induce a specific protein interaction of SjGST-26 with the glycine transporter GlyT1 and the GABA transporter GAT3 in vitro, suggesting that metal-binding sites on SjGST-26 and neurotransmitter transporters might function in metal-coordinated interactions with other metalloproteins.

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