Dwijen Sarkar
Indian Institute of Chemical Biology
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Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1992
Chandana Banerjee; Dwijen Sarkar
We describe here a protein kinase from the promastigote form of the parasitic protozoan, Leishmania donovani, purified to near homogeneity to a single-subunit, 34-kDa protein. This enzyme does not require a cofactor, and has several characteristics in common with the catalytic subunit of mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase, for example, preference for kemptide as a substrate, phosphorylation of serine residues of protamine and inhibition by the mammalian heat-stable inhibitor. The leishmanial enzyme can associate with the regulatory subunit of mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase to form an inactive holoenzyme that is activated by cAMP and is protected from inhibition by thiol reagents. From these results it is concluded that L. donovani promastigotes possess a protein kinase which has similar characteristics with the mammalian catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1991
Sujata Misra; Kshudiram Naskar; Dwijen Sarkar; Dilip K. Ghosh
SummaryLeishmania donovani, the etiological agent for the disease visceral leishmaniasis, attach themselves to the macrophages for initiation of the disease. The attachment process has been found to be regulated by Ca2+ ions. Verapamil, a Ca2+-channel blocker inhibits Leishmania-macrophage attachment. The inhibitory effect is increased with time. Nifedipine, another Ca2+-channel blocker exhibits the same effect. The attachment process is stimulated by Ca2+-ionophore alone. The inhibitory effects of the calcium channel blockers are reversed by the ionophore.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1994
Tapati Sanyal; Dilip K. Ghosh; Dwijen Sarkar
In SDS-PAGE the immune complexes (IC) of kala-azar patient sera showed intense bands at 55 kDa and 20 kDa corresponding to heavy and light chains of immunoglobulins. In immunoblot experiment, kala-azar and normal IC after treatment with patient sera showed multiple bands of which the band at 55 kDa was most prominent in kala-azar IC. It is known that in kala-azar sera antihuman IgG is present, so the heavy band at 55 kDa region may be due to higher amount of IgG and/or other antigen(s) present at that region. Immunoblot experiments of kala-azar IC with anti gp63 also developed a major band at 55 kDa. It suggests that the antigen (55 kDa) and gp63 have common antigenic epitope (s). Normal IC did not react with anti gp63 indicating absence of this antigen in normal IC. Antigenic similarity between the IC antigen (55 kDa) and gp63 indicated that the former antigen may have been processed from gp63. In summary, identification of a parasite antigen (55 kDa) in IC of kala-azar patients sera may be useful in developing a serodiagnostic assay for visceral leishmaniasis. (Mol Cell Biochem130: 11–17, 1994)
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1996
Anil K. Bhunia; Dwijen Sarkar; Pijush K. Das
We investigated activation signaling events in bone marrow‐derived macrophages after infection with Leishmania donovani, an intracellular parasite of macrophages. Leishmania donovani infection caused a general suppression of activation parameters like O2‐ and NO production. However, conditions which allow parasite attachment and prevent entry resulted in triggering of O2‐ and NO production and stimulation of O2 consumption. Optimal NO and O2‐ production occurred when bone marrow‐derived macrophages and Leishmania ratio was 1:100. The activation signal for O2‐ production was initiated 15 min after parasite attachment, whereas augmentation of NO production started 6 h after attachment. Activation of O2‐ and NO generation by L. donovani attachment was inhibited by staurosporine as well as by prolonged treatment of phorbol myristate acetate suggesting a protein kinase C‐dependent mechanism. Translocation studies showed that protein kinase C activity in cell membrane fraction rapidly and transiently increased following parasite attachment. No such protein kinase C translocation event occurred in L. donovani infected bone marrow‐derived macrophages. Phorbol myristate acetate was found to stimulate membrane translocation of protein kinase C in parasite attached cells whereas it was impaired in infected cells. However, both attachment and infection induced a similar shift of phorbol receptors from cytosolic to membrane fraction indicating that in infected cells the translocation of protein kinase C protein was not impaired but the activity of the membrane associated enzyme was somehow inhibited. These results suggest that although internalization of intracellular parasites like L. donovani caused inhibition of nitrite and superoxide release, mere attachment on macrophage surface resulted in an activation of protein kinase C‐mediated downstream oxidative events.
Biochemical Medicine and Metabolic Biology | 1989
Sujata Misra; Tapati Sanyal; Dwijen Sarkar; Prabhat Kumar Bhattacharya; Dilip K. Ghosh
TAA, an inhibitor of the enzyme aconitase, inhibits the growth of L. donovani promastigotes. Morphogenic transformation of the amastigote to the promastigote (table; see text) form in vitro was also inhibited by 2 mM TAA. TAA also reduced multiplication of the parasite in macrophage culture. In the hamster model of leishmania, TAA significantly reduced the parasitic burden of liver. In acute toxicity tests with BALB/c mice no deaths were recorded even at a dose level of 2 g/kg body wt/day.
Journal of Biosciences | 2004
Sanjeev Pandey; Phuljhuri Chakraborti; Rakhi Sharma; Santu Bandyopadhyay; Dwijen Sarkar; Samit Adhya
The major surface glycoprotein gp63 of the kinetoplastid protozoal parasiteLeishmania is implicated as a ligand mediating uptake of the parasite into, and survival within, the host macrophage. By expressing gp63 antisense RNA from an episomal vector inL. donovani promastigotes, gp63-deficient transfectants were obtained. Reduction of the gp63 level resulted in increased generation times, altered cell morphology, accumulation of cells in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle, and increased numbers of binucleate cells with one or two kinetoplasts. Growth was stimulated, and the number of binucleate cells reduced, by addition to the culture of a bacterially expressed fusion protein containing the fibronectin-like SRYD motif and the zinc-binding (metalloprotease) domain of gp63. These observations support an additional role of gp63 in promastigote multiplication; the fibronectin-like properties of gp63 may be important in this process
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2001
Chandana Banerjee; Dwijen Sarkar
The most commonly used method to determine the cAMP binding activity in cytosolic extracts of promastigotes of Leishmania spp. underestimated by approximately 11.5-fold the total amount of [(3)H]cAMP bound, when compared with results obtained by the modified Millipore filter technique. Three cAMP-binding proteins (BPI, BPII and BPIII) were partially purified and characterized. The native molecular masses of BPI, BPII and BPIII were estimated to be 105, 155 and 145 kDa, respectively. The binding of [(3)H]cAMP to these proteins was affected to different extents by several cAMP analogues. Antibodies directed against the types I and II regulatory subunits of PKA did not cross-react with the leishmanial extract. Photoaffinity labeling of the cytosolic extracts with 8-N(3)-[(32)P]cAMP specifically labeled a band of M(r) 116000 and a band of M(r) 80000 partially saturable by cAMP. From these results, it is concluded that the leishmanial cAMP-binding proteins appear to belong to a different class distinct from the regulatory subunits of cAMP-dependent protein kinases.
Journal of Biosciences | 1994
Tapati Sanyal; Prosenjit Gangopadhyay; Dilip K Ghost; Dwijen Sarkar
Indo-Gen mediated surface labelling with125I demonstrated differences in surface oriented antigens between virulent and virulent promastigote ofLeishniania donovani, In case of virulent strains, surface polypeptides with molecular masses of 63, 53, 42 and 38 kDa were found to be labelled with125I whereas in the case of aviralent stains 68, 55, 50, 46, 42 and 33 Da, components were iodinated. Further studies by immunoblot assay using different subcellular fractions of virulent and avirulent parasites demonstrated that antibody raised against gp63 cross-reacted with the 63 and 60 kDa antigen of the virulent and avirulentLeishmania donovani strains of Indian origin respectively. It indicates that these two polypeptides are antigenically similar. When virulent and avirulent cells were grown in the presence of varying concentration of tunicarnycin and immunoblot with anti gp63, it was observed that with increasing concentration of tunicamycin the 63 kDa polypeptide of the virulent cells shifted to approximately 58–57 kDa and the 60 kDa polypoptide of the aviruleni cells shifted to 57 kDa. This suggests that glycosylation may play an important role in antigenic variation between virulent and avirulent parasites.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1995
Srabani Nandi; Dwijen Sarkar
A soluble protein phosphatase from the promastigote form of the parasitic protozoanLeishmania donovani was partially purified using Sephadex G-100, DEAE-cellulose and again Sephadex G-100 columns. The partially purified enzyme showed a native molecular weight of about 42, 000 in both Sephadex G-100 and sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The sedimentation constant, stokes radius and frictional ratio were found to be 3.43S, 2.8 nm and 1.20 respectively. The enzyme preferentially utilized phosphohistone as the best exogenous substrate. Mg2+ ions were essential for enzyme activity; among other metal ions Mn2+ can replace Mg2+ to a certain extent whereas Ca2+, Co2+ and Zn2+ could not substitute for Mg2+. The pH optimum of the enzyme was 6.5–7.5 and the temperature optimum 37°C. The apparent Km for phosphohistone was 7.14 μM. ATP, ADP, inorganic phosphate and pyrophosphate had inhibitory effect on the enzyme activity whereas no inhibition was observed with sodium tartrate and okadaic acid. These results suggest thatL. donovani promastigotes possess a protein phosphatase which has similar characteristics with the mammalian protein phosphatase 2C.
Microbiology | 1990
Chandana Banerjee; Dwijen Sarkar