Back to Search
Start Over
Development of a phosphorylated Momordica charantia protein system for inhibiting susceptible dose-dependent C. albicans to available antimycotics: An allosteric regulation of protein
- Source :
- European journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences. 109
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- A regulatory Momordica charantia protein system was constructed allosterically by in vitro protein phosphorylation, in an attempt to evaluate antimycological pluripotency against dose-dependent susceptibilities in C. albicans. Fungal strain lineages susceptible to ketoconazole, econazole, miconazole, 5-flucytosine, nystatin and amphotericin B were prepared in laboratory, followed by identification via antifungal susceptibility testing. Protein phosphorylation was carried out in reactions with 5′-adenylic, guanidylic, cytidylic and uridylic acids and cyclic adenosine triphosphate, through catalysis of cyclin-dependent kinase 1, protein kinase A and protein kinase C respectively. Biochemical analysis of enzymatic reactions indicated the apparent Michaelis-Menten constants and maximal velocity values of 16.57–91.97 mM and 55.56–208.33 μM·min− 1, together with an approximate 1:1 reactant stoichiometric ratio. Three major protein phosphorylation sites were theoretically predicted at Thr255, Thr102 and Thr24 by a KinasePhos tool. Additionally, circular dichroism spectroscopy demonstrated that upon phosphorylation, protein folding structures were decreased in random coil, β6-sheet and α1-helix partial regions. McFarland equivalence standard testing yielded the concentration-dependent inhibition patterns, while fungus was grown in Sabouraud's dextrose agar. The minimal inhibitory concentrations of 0.16–0.51 μM (at 50% response) were obtained for free protein and phosphorylated counterparts. With respect to the 3-cycling susceptibility testing regimen, individuals of total protein forms were administrated in-turn at 0.14 μM/cycle. Relative inhibition ratios were retained to 66.13–81.04% of initial ones regarding the ketoconazole-susceptible C. albicans growth. An inhibitory protein system, with an advantage of decreasing antifungal susceptibilities to diverse antimycotics, was proposed because of regulatory pluripotency whereas little contribution to susceptibility in itself.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Antifungal Agents
Kinase
030106 microbiology
Allosteric regulation
Pharmaceutical Science
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Biology
Ribosome Inactivating Proteins, Type 2
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
Biochemistry
chemistry
Allosteric Regulation
Candida albicans
Phosphorylation
Protein phosphorylation
Protein folding
Protein kinase A
Adenosine triphosphate
Protein kinase C
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18790720
- Volume :
- 109
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- European journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3f5670f8f6a8baa38cd7fc6158fe29a6