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HHMI International Research Scholars
A. Carlos Frasch, Ph.D.
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BIOGRAPHY:

Dr. Frasch is Director of the Institute for Research in Biotechnology, National University of General San Martin; Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Buenos Aires; and Career Researcher, Research Career Department, National Research Council, Buenos Aires. Dr. Frasch received a Ph.D. in cell biology in 1977 from the University of Buenos Aires. He did postdoctoral work in the Netherlands at the University of Amsterdam and in the United States at the University of Oregon. He was head of the Molecular Biology Laboratory at the Institute of Biochemistry Research, Campomar Foundation, Buenos Aires, from 1986 to 1996. From 1990 to 1993 he chaired the TDR/WHO Steering Committee on Chagas' disease, and since 1994 he has co-chaired its Committee on Parasite Genomes. Dr. Frasch received the Luis F. Leloir Award in 1993, the 2000 Award in Biology from the Third World Academy of Sciences, a 2001 Guggenheim Fellowship, and the 2003 Merit Diploma in Cytology and Molecular Biology from the Konex Foundation in Argentina. He was first awarded an HHMI International Research Scholar grant in 1997. He works on Trypanosoma cruzi mucins and trans-sialidase surface molecules.

RESEARCH ABSTRACT SUMMARY:

Structure, Protein Engineering and Inhibitors of the Trypanosoma cruzi Virulence Factor Trans-Sialidase

American (Trypanosoma cruzi) and African (T. brucei) trypanosomes express a surface trans-sialidase (TS), a unique enzyme that transfers sialic acid from host glycoconjugates to terminal galactoses in surface parasite molecules. In T. cruzi, TS has relevant functions in cell infection and protection of the parasite and is involved in the pathology caused by the trypanosome. The relevant functions of TS make it a good target for the development of alternative chemotherapies against the infection. We have recently obtained the crystal structure of the T. cruzi enzyme (Buschiazzo et al., Mol. Cell 10:757, 2002), which has allowed us to identify critical residues in the sialic acid and galactose binding sites. This information allowed the characterization of the catalytic nucleophile (Watts et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125:7532–7533, 2003) and the construction of mutants with the aim of obtaining trans-sialylation activity from a sialidase scaffold (Paris et al., submitted). Five point mutations were enough to obtain a sialidase mutant with trans-sialidase activity, but a sixth mutation reduced the activity to about 10 percent of that present in the wild-type TS. The structure obtained prompted us to test compounds for their biological activity. Given that the galactose site is unique to TS, lactose derivatives able to compete with the widely used acceptor acetyllactosamine were tested. The glucose open-chain derivatives lactitol and lactobionic acid were found to be good acceptors of sialic acid. In vivo, lactitol effectively inhibited both the transfer of sialic acid to acetyllactosamine and the re-sialylation of parasite mucins. Lactitol also diminished T. cruzi infection in cultured Vero cells by 20–27 percent. These results indicate that structure-based design of lactose derivatives might allow the identification of compounds directed to the lactose-binding site of TS to prevent parasite sialylation and, thus, infection.


Photo: Dominic Chaplin, Pine Creek Pictures

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