REPAIRtoire - a database of DNA repair pathways

Welcome! Click here to login or here to register.
Home
Proteins
DNA damage
Diseases
Homologs
Pathways
Keywords
Publications
Draw a picture
 
Search
 
Links
Help
Contact





Bujnicki Lab Homepage

"Kinetic properties and specificity of trimeric Plasmodium falciparum and human dUTPases."

Quesada-Soriano I, Casas-Solvas JM, Recio E, Ruiz-Perez LM, Vargas-Berenguel A, Gonzalez-Pacanowska D, Garcia-Fuentes L



Published Jan. 1, 2010 in Biochimie volume 92 .

Pubmed ID: 19879316

Abstract:
Deoxyuridine 5'-triphosphate nucleotidohydrolase (dUTPase, EC 3.6.1.23) catalyzes the hydrolysis of dUTP to dUMP and pyrophosphate, and plays important roles in nucleotide metabolism and DNA replication. Hydrolysis of other nucleotides similar in structure to dUTP would be physiologically negative and therefore high substrate specificity is essential. Binding and hydrolysis of nucleotides different to dUTP by the dUTPases from Plasmodium falciparum (PfdUTPase) and human (hdUTPase) was evaluated by applying isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). The ribo and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates dGTP, dATP, dCTP, dTTP, UTP, FdUTP and IdUTP have been analysed. dUTP and FdUTP were the most specific substrates for both enzymes. The specificity constants (k(cat)/K(m)) for the remaining ones, except for the IdUTP, were very similar for both enzymes, although PfdUTPase showed a slightly higher specificity for dCTP and UTP and the human enzyme for dTTP and dCTP. PfdUTPase was very efficient in using FdUTP as substrate indicating that small size substituents in the 5' position are well tolerated. In addition product inhibition was assessed by binding studies with the nucleoside monophosphate derivatives and thermodynamic parameters were established. When FdUTP hydrolysis was monitored, Plasmodium dUTPase was more sensitive to end-product inhibition by FdUMP than the human enzyme. Taken together these results highlight further significant differences between the human and Plasmodium enzymes that may be exploitable in selective inhibitor design.


This publication refers to following REPAIRtoire entries:



Last modification of this entry: Oct. 6, 2010

Add your own comment!

There is no comment yet.
Welcome stranger! Click here to login or here to register.
Valid HTML 4.01! This site is Emacs powered. Made with Django.