CELL BIOLOGY AND METABOLISM
Prospects for Antiparasitic Drugs: THE CASE OF TRYPANOSOMA BRUCEI, THE CAUSATIVE AGENT OF AFRICAN SLEEPING SICKNESS*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.10.5500Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Glycolysis in the bloodstream form of Trypanosoma brucei provides a convenient context for studying the prospects for using enzyme inhibitors as antiparasitic drugs. As the recently developed model of this system (Bakker, B. M., Michels, P. A. M., Opperdoes, F. R., and Westerhoff, H. V. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 3207–3215) contains 20 enzyme-catalyzed reactions or transport steps, there are apparently numerous potential targets for drugs. However, as most flux control resides in the glucose-transport step, this is the only step for which inhibition can be expected to produce large effects on flux, and in the computer model such effects prove to be surprisingly small (although larger than those obtained by inhibiting any other step). It follows that there is little prospect of killing trypanosomes by depressing their glycolysis to a level incapable of sustaining life. The alternative is to use inhibition to increase the concentration of a metabolite sufficiently to interfere with the viability of the organism. For this purpose, only uncompetitive inhibition of pyruvate export proves effective in the model; in all other cases studied, the effects on metabolite concentrations are little more than trivial. This observation can be explained by the fact that nearly all of the metabolite concentrations in the system are held within relatively narrow ranges by stoichiometric constraints.

Cited by (0)

*

This work was supported by the ALLIANCE program for collaboration between the United Kingdom and France under the auspices of the British Council and Agence Pour l'Accueil des Personnalités Etrangères.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.