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Antitumoral


Biochemical and functional characterization of an l-amino acid oxidase isolated from Bothrops pirajai snake venom.


Izidoro LF, Ribeiro MC, Souza GR, Sant'ana CD, Hamaguchi A, Homsi-Brandeburgo MI, Goulart LR, Beleboni RO, Nomizo A, Sampaio SV, Soares AM, Rodrigues VM.


In this work we describe the isolation of a new l-amino acid oxidase (LAAO) referred to as BpirLAAO-I from Bothrops pirajai snake venom, which was highly purified using a combination of molecular exclusion, affinity, and hydrophobic chromatography steps. BpirLAAO-I homodimeric acid glycoprotein (approximate Mr and pI of 130,000 and 4.9, respectively) displays high specificity toward hydrophobic/aromatic amino acids, while deglycosylation does not alter its enzymatic activity. The N-terminal LAAO sequence of its first 49 amino acids presented a high similarity between a amino acid sequence with other LAAOs from: Bothrops spp., Crotalus spp., Calloselasma rhodostoma, Agkistrodon spp., Trimeresurus spp., Pseudechis australis, Oxyuranus scutellatus, and Notechis scutatus. BpirLAAO-I induces time-dependent platelet aggregation, mouse paw edema, cytotoxic activity against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Leishmania sp., and tumor cells, and also a typical fago (M13mp18) DNA fragmentation. Platelet aggregation, leishmanicidal and antitumoral activities were reduced by catalase. Thus, BpirLAAO-I is a multifunctional protein with promising biotechnological and medical applications.


Bioorg Med Chem. 2006 Jun 27; [Epub ahead of print]

l-amino acid oxidase, snake venom, biochemical and functional characterization



Bothrops moojeni myotoxin-II, a Lys49-phospholipase A2 homologue: an example of function versatility of snake venom proteins


MjTX-II, a myotoxic phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) homologue from Bothrops moojeni venom, was functionally and structurally characterized. The MjTX-II characterization included: (i) functional characterization (antitumoral, antimicrobial and antiparasitic effects); (ii) effects of structural modifications by 4-bromophenacyl bromide (BPB), cyanogen bromide (CNBr), acetic anhydride and 2-nitrobenzenesulphonyl fluoride (NBSF); (iii) enzymatic characterization: inhibition by low molecular weight heparin and EDTA; and (iv) molecular characterization: cDNA sequence and molecular structure prediction. The results demonstrated that MjTX-II displayed antimicrobial activity by growth inhibition against Escherichia coli and Candida albicans, antitumoral activity against Erlich ascitic tumor (EAT), human breast adenocarcinoma (SK-BR-3) and human T leukemia cells (JURKAT) and antiparasitic effects against Schistosoma mansoni and Leishmania spp., which makes MjTX-II a promising molecular model for future therapeutic applications, as well as other multifunctional homologous Lys49-PLA(2)s or even derived peptides. This work provides useful insights into the structural determinants of the action of Lys49-PLA(2) homologues and, together with additional strategies, supports the concept of the presence of others "bioactive sites" distinct from the catalytic site in snake venom myotoxic PLA(2)s.


Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol. 2006 Mar-Apr;142(3-4):371-81. Epub 2006 Jan 24



Atividades Biológicas induzidas pela MjTX-II isolada do veneno de Bothrops moojeni


Stabeli RG, Amui SF, Sant'Ana CD, Pires MG, Nomizo A, Monteiro MC, Romao PR, Guerra-Sa R, Vieira CA, Giglio JR, Fontes MR, Soares AM.

Depto. Análises Clínicas, Toxicológicas e Bromatológicas-FCFRP-USP, Ribeirão Preto-SP.

Atividade Miotóxica, indução de edema, citotoxicidade, neurotoxicidade

Artigos Científicos (Periódicos)

Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol. 2006 Mar-Apr;142(3-4):371-81. Epub 2006 Jan 24




Cloning and identification of a complete cDNA coding for a bactericidal and antitumoral acidic phospholipase A2 from Bothrops ja


Roberto PG, Kashima S, Marcussi S, Pereira JO, Astolfi-Filho S, Nomizo A, Giglio JR, Fontes MR, Soares AM, Franca SC.


Cloning and identification of a complete cDNA coding for a bactericidal and antitumoral acidic phospholipase A2 from Bothrops jararacussu venom.

In order to better understand the function of acidic phospholipases A2 (PLA2s) from snake venoms, expressed sequence tags (ESTs) that code for acidic PLA2s were isolated from a cDNA library prepared from the poly(A)+ RNA of venomous glands of Bothrops jararacussu. The complete nucleotide sequence (366 bp), named BOJU-III, encodes the BthA-I-PLA2 precursor, which includes a signal peptide and the mature protein with 16 and 122 amino acid residues, respectively. Multiple comparison of both the nucleotide and respective deduced amino acid sequence with EST and protein sequences from databases revealed that the full-length cDNA identified (BOJU III--AY145836) is related to an acidic PLA2 sharing similarity, within the range 55-81%, with acidic phospholipases from snake venoms. Moreover, phylogenetic analysis of amino acid sequences of acidic PLA2s from several pit viper genera showed close evolutionary relationships among acidic PLA2s from Bothrops, Crotalus, and Trimeresurus. The molecular modeling showed structural similarity with other dimeric class II PLA2s from snake venoms. The native protein BthA-I-PLA2, a nontoxic acidic PLA2 directly isolated from Bothrops jararacussu snake venom, was purified and submitted to various bioassays. BthA-I-PLA2 displayed high catalytic activity and induced Ca2+-dependent liposome disruption. Edema induced by this PLA2 was inhibited by indomethacin and dexamethasone, thus suggesting involvement of the cyclo-oxygenase pathway. BthA-I-PLA2 showed anticoagulant activity upon human plasma and inhibited phospholipid-dependent platelet aggregation induced by collagen or ADP. In addition, it displayed bactericidal activity against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus and antitumoral effect upon breast adrenocarcinoma as well as upon human leukemia T and Erlich ascitic tumor. Following chemical modification with p-bromophenacyl bromide, total loss of the enzymatic and pharmacological activities were observed. This is the first report on the isolation and identification of a cDNA encoding a complete acidic PLA2 from Bothrops venom, exhibiting bactericidal and antitumoral effects.


Protein J. 2004 (4):273-85.



Antitumor activity and apoptosis inducing of L-Amino Acid Oxidase from Bothrops moojeni “in vitro"


Malta-Neto, N.R.1; Stabeli, R.G.5; Marcussi, S.1,2; Nomizo, A.4; Sant’Ana, C.D.4; Giglio, J. R.2; Sampaio, S. V.4; Oliveira, E.B.2; Soares, A.M.1,4.
(smarcussi@rbi.fmrp.usp.br)


L-Amino acid oxidases (LAAO, EC 1.4.3.2) are flavoenzymes which catalyze the stereospecific oxidative deamination of an L-amino acid substrate to a corresponding α-ketoacid with the production of hydrogen peroxide and ammonia, via an imino acid intermediate. These enzymes are widely distributed in many different organisms such as bacteria, fungi, green algae and venomous snakes and are involved in the utilization of nitrogen sources. The present investigation reports isolation and biochemical characterization of L-amino acid oxidase (BmooLAAO-I) from Bothrops moojeni venom,
anti-Tumor effect upon murine melanoma, human breast adenocarcinoma, human leukemia T as well as upon peripheral human mononuclear cells. The citotoxic assay was done by using the MTT method described by Mosmann. It still shows the capacity of BmooLAAO-I to induce apoptosis in human leukemia cells compared to paclitaxel. It was tested in flux citometer after incubation with anexin V and propidium iodide. BmooLAAO-I is an acidic glycoprotein with about 130kDa arranged in two 66kDa monomers. It displays a high specificity toward hydrophobic and basic amino acids, while deglycosylation does not alter its enzymatic activity. BmooLAAO-I also displays dose dependent and anti-Tumor activities. The mechanism by its acts seems to be oxidative effects of hydrogen peroxide. Other mechanism involved in citotoxicity is apoptosis induction. SV-LAAOs are therefore interesting multifunctional enzymes, not only for a better understanding of the ophidian envenomation mechanism, but also due to their biotechnological potential as model for therapeutic agents.




Anti-protozoary, Anti-bacterial and antitumor activity of L-Amino Acid Oxidase from Bothrops moojeni “in vitro”


Malta-Neto, N.R.1; Stabeli, R.G.2; Marcussi, S.1; Monteiro M.C.2; Romão P.R.T.2;3; Nomizo, A.4;

1Unidade de Biotecnologia UNAERP, Ribeirão Preto-SP; 2Departamento de Bioquímica e Imunologia and Departamento de Farmacologia, FMRP/USP, Ribeirão Preto-SP; 3Departamento de Imunologia, UNISUL-Tuba

Eventos (Congressos, Simpósios, etc)

SBTX 2004



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