Functional Specific Binding of Testosterone to Schistosoma haematobium 28-Kilodalton Glutathione S-Transferase

F Remoué, JC Mani, M Pugniere… - Infection and …, 2002 - Am Soc Microbiol
F Remoué, JC Mani, M Pugniere, AM Schacht, A Capron, G Riveau
Infection and Immunity, 2002Am Soc Microbiol
During parasitic disease such as schistosomiasis, sex hormones have an important
influence on the age-and gender-dependent level of infection. Since mammal glutathione S-
transferase (GST) has the ability to bind hormones and particularly sexual steroids to
influence their transport, metabolism, and physiological action, we have evaluated the
capacity of testosterone to bind the 28-kDa GST of the Schistosoma haematobium parasite
(Sh28GST). For the first time, we have demonstrated a specific binding of testosterone to …
Abstract
During parasitic disease such as schistosomiasis, sex hormones have an important influence on the age- and gender-dependent level of infection. Since mammal glutathione S-transferase (GST) has the ability to bind hormones and particularly sexual steroids to influence their transport, metabolism, and physiological action, we have evaluated the capacity of testosterone to bind the 28-kDa GST of the Schistosoma haematobium parasite (Sh28GST). For the first time, we have demonstrated a specific binding of testosterone to parasite GST protein with high affinity (Kd = 2.57 × 10−7 M). In addition, we have assessed the effect of this binding on Sh28GST enzymatic activity, a mechanism closely associated with the reduction of Schistosoma fecundity. We showed that testosterone has the functional ability to inhibit the Sh28GST enzymatic activity in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that this hormone could be directly involved in an antifecundity mechanism. This effect seemed to be related to the binding of testosterone to one peptide involved in the enzymatic site (i.e., amino acids 24 to 43). During human infection, binding of sexual hormones to Schistosoma Sh28GST could play a key role in parasite metabolism, especially the decrease of fecundity, and could be involved in the sex-dependent immune response to Sh28GST that we have previously observed in infected adults.
American Society for Microbiology