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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2008, p. 183-191, Vol. 52, No. 1
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00773-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Biochemie-Zentrum der Universität Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 504, D-69120 Heidelberg,1 Interdisziplinäres Forschungszentrum der Universität Gießen, Heinrich Buff Ring 26-32, D-35392 Gießen,2 European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstr. 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany3
Received 15 June 2007/ Returned for modification 30 August 2007/ Accepted 10 October 2007
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After MB was revisited as an antimalarial agent (6, 53) and found to be an inhibitor of Plasmodium falciparum glutathione (GSH) reductase (GR) (23), it was studied as a partner drug in antimalarial drug combinations (2, 39, 48, 51).
Compared with other antiparasitic agents, MB is affordable and registered in most countries (as the treatment of choice for acute and chronic methemoglobinemia [16, 17, 36]), and it can be made internationally available in sufficient dosages (51). The price for treating a malaria episode in a child with an MB-containing drug combination would be less than
0.50 (40). Drug resistance has not been reported for MB and could not be provoked in rodent malaria models (52, 53).
Because of its favorable properties, including the differential staining of cell biological structures and protein crystals, medicinal utility, and unique physicochemical and photochemical characteristics, MB has been studied in practically all scientific and technical disciplines (6, 41, 54). The classical review of Clark et al. (20) quoted more than 400 papers on MB written by Bernthsen, Brönsted, Clark, Ehrlich, Feulgen, Guillemont, Hopkins, Koch, Laveran, Marshall, Michaelis, Meyerhof, Neisser, Phelps, Schardinger, Thunberg, Warburg, and Wieland, among others.
However, very few systematic studies have been conducted on the interaction of MB with enzymes and other proteins under quasiphysiological conditions. Accordingly, we studied properties of MB that are relevant for biochemical and cell pharmacological investigations such as UV/Vis absorption and spontaneous reactions of MB with cell physiological reductants. The product of these reactions is leucomethylene blue (leucoMB), the two-electron-reduced form of MB (20, 41).
Our main focus is the interaction of MB with the homodimeric flavoenzymes of the GR family that are present both in the malarial parasite and in the mammalian host cell (4, 9, 34). The physiological reactions catalyzed by these enzymes are as follows (with equation 1 in the case of GR and equation 2 in the case of thioredoxin reductase [TrxR]):
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![]() | (2) |
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It is worth mentioning that LipDH is still called diaphorase because its diaphoretic activity, the reduction of naphthoquinones and other xenobiotics, was known before its physiological function was discovered (37). Studies on redox-cycling naphthoquinone derivatives where MB was used as a control indicated that MB is not only an inhibitor but also a substrate of P. falciparum GR (12). As reported here, we tested this hypothesis and extended it to the other disulfide reductases of P. falciparum and the human host cells.
Accordingly, the disulfide reductases would catalyze the following reaction:
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A 75 mM stock solution of oxidized lipoamide was prepared in ethanol. When 5 to 10 µl of this solution was added to a 1-ml sample, the resulting ethanol concentration was 100 to 200 mM. NADH (10 mM) or NADPH (4 mM) was prepared fresh every day by adding the respective buffers to weighed-out samples and kept at 0°C; when buffers with a pH of <5.2 were used, the NAD(P)H solutions were made up every hour. Enzyme stock solutions (0.2 mM [10 mg/ml]) (see below) were dialyzed against the respective buffers in 50-µl quantities.
GR assay buffer contained 47 mM potassium phosphate, 1 mM EDTA, and 200 mM KCl (adjusted to pH 6.9); TrxR assay buffer contained 100 mM potassium phosphate and 2 mM EDTA (adjusted to pH 7.4), and LipDH assay buffer contained 50 mM potassium phosphate and 1 mM EDTA (adjusted to pH 7.4).
Disulfide reductase assay buffer contained 100 mM potassium acetate and 200 mM KCl (adjusted to pH 5.0).
MB. MB (CAS 61-73-4; EC 200-515-2) is 3,7-bis(dimethyl-amino)-phenol-thiazin-5-ium chloride. MB as a hydrochloride (methylthioninium chloride from Roth) has an Mr of 320; Sigma sells MB trihydrate (Mr 373.9). MB (1%) (10 mg/ml MB hydrochloride trihydrate) is a 26.7 mM aqueous solution. Uncharged leucoMB has an Mr of 285. Stock solutions of 1 mM MB were kept at room temperature in dark bottles for up to 1 week.
MB was quantitated using a method described previously by Clark et al. (20). Alternatively, for routine determinations of MB+ in stock solutions, we diluted aliquots with 100 mM potassium acetate-200 mM KCl adjusted to pH 5 and measured the absorption at 613 nm. An absorption coefficient of 40.0 mM–1 cm–1 was found to apply for an MB concentration of 2 to 50 µM in the pH range of 2 to 7.5. Occasionally, we observed light-dependent bleaching of MB (20, 41) and ascribed this to the presence of EDTA in our buffers. Although the effect was not reproducible, we repeated the respective experiments in EDTA-free buffer. Mills and Wang previously discussed whether MB itself can act as sacrificial electron donor when exposed to light (41).
Disulfide reductases and other proteins. The enzymes GR (23), TrxR (29, 42), and mitochondrial LipDH of P. falciparum (38) were expressed in recombinant forms, purified, and assayed at 25°C as described previously. For the mammalian counterparts, we used recombinant human GR (44), human TrxR (from placenta as well as the recombinant enzyme) (24, 27), and pig heart mitochondrial LipDH (obtained from Sigma), the best-studied mammalian LipDH (4, 56).
Expression plasmids in GR-free Escherichia coli SG5 cells of human GR mutants lacking one or both active-site cysteine residues were kindly provided by Rimma Iozef, Heidelberg University. The recombinant GR species including the yellow Cys63Ala mutant, the yellow double mutant Cys58Ala/Cys63Ala, and the relatively unstable orange-colored Cys58Ala mutant were purified as described previously for recombinant wild-type GR (44). As the mutants were found to have no detectable GSSG reduction activity, they were identified by their color during the purification procedure. An
value of 11.3 mM–1 cm–1 at a
max,vis of 455 nm was assumed for these mutants.
P. falciparum thioredoxin 1, which is a substrate of both TrxRs, was prepared as previously described (29). Human thioredoxin 1 is not suitable for routine measurements; consequently, we used the His-tagged Cys73Ser mutant of this protein (H. Merkle and S. Gromer, unpublished data). Drosophila melanogaster thioredoxin 2 (8) served as a general eukaryotic thioredoxin.
Determination of second-order rate constants at 25°C.
The rate for the reaction NAD(P)H + MB+
NAD(P)+ + leucoMB was measured in 1-ml cuvettes. Starting out with 200 µM NADPH or NADH (
= 6.22 mM–1 cm–1 at 340 nm) in phosphate buffer at pH 7, MB (10 to 50 µM) was added, and the rate of disappearance of NADPH or NADH was measured. As the absorption at 613 nm did not change, we assumed that leucoMB was auto-oxidized so rapidly that the MB concentration remained constant and that the contribution of leucoMB to the absorption at 340 nm can be neglected.
When the reduction of MB by GSH, thioredoxin, or dihydrolipoamide was studied, the thiols were kept in the reduced form using only 10 mU ml–1 disulfide reductase and 100 to 200 µM NADPH or, in the case of LipDH, 100 to 200 µM NADH. Otherwise, the procedure corresponded to that used for the GHOST assay (25), using MB instead of GSSG as the final oxidant of NADPH or NADH. The spontaneous oxidation of NAD(P)H by MB and the enzyme-catalyzed reduction of MB (see below) were accounted for.
In an alternative procedure, the rate of oxidation of SH groups by MB was measured by determining the residual thiol concentration at given time points using a method described by Ellman (22). Dithioerythritol (10 µM) (20 µM thiol), 40 µM MB, and incubation times of up to 120 min at 25°C represent optimal conditions.
NAD(P)H auto-oxidase activities of disulfide reductases. At 25°C in the presence of 100 µM NAD(P)H and atmospheric O2, the turnover of NAD(P)H was recorded at 340 nm first in the absence and consecutively in the presence of the enzyme studied, and the inherent NADPH auto-oxidase activity, corrected for the spontaneous NAD(P)H oxidation rate, was calculated (13). At pH 5.0, the apparent NADPH auto-oxidase activity of P. falciparum GR was found to be 40 times higher than that at pH 7.0.
MB reduction activity of disulfide reductases.
In a standard experiment, 25 µl 4 mM NADPH was added to 940 µl assay buffer, leading to an absorption of 0.62 at 340 nm. This was followed by 3 to 30 µl 1 mM MB in water. After 5 min, the rate
Aspont/min, representing the spontaneous reaction between NADPH and MB, was measured. Subsequently, we added 5 µl of 0.2 mM (11 mg/ml) GR. This led to
Atotal/min, the rate of the maximal decrease in absorption. As MB is regenerated by the auto-oxidation of leucoMB, the oxidation of NADPH proceeded until it was completely consumed. In a separate experiment, a sample containing 970 µl buffer, 25 µl 4 mM NADPH, and 5 µl concentrated enzyme solution was mixed. The rate of absorbance decrease (
ANOX/min) represents the intrinsic NADPH auto-oxidase activity of the enzyme. The oxidation rate of NADPH due to the reduction of MB is given by the following equation:
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Enzymatic bleaching of MB under aerobic conditions at pH 5.0. MB can be reduced to leucoMB using P. falciparum TrxR or GR at pH 5.0. The absorption at 613 nm was zeroed for 950 µl buffer at pH 5.0. Subsequently, we added 20 µl 1.00 mM MB in H2O and measured an absorbance of 0.830. Twenty-five microliters of 4 mM NADPH in buffer at pH 5 and 5 µl 10 mg/ml TrxR or GR were then added. After 1 min, the absorbance had fallen to a minimum value of 0.005 and stayed there for approximately 3 min. After NADPH had been consumed, the absorbance at 613 nm rose again, but this could be reversed by adding NADPH (final concentration, 50 µM).
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TABLE 1. Biochemically and pharmacologically relevant characteristics of MB and leucoMBa
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= 75 mM–1 cm–1) than the dimer (45). As the Kdiss of the dimer is approximately 200 µM in phosphate buffers at pH 7.0, one expects low
values when measurements are done at total MB concentrations above 50 µM. This explains, e.g., the low
value of 45 mM–1 cm–1 reported previously (51). Under aerobic conditions at physiological pH, leucoMB is auto-oxidized rapidly so that the absorptions at 340 nm or at 613 nm do not change while MB is transiently reduced. Reactions of MB with cellular reductants. MB reacts spontaneously with NADPH according to equation 4. The second-order rate constant for the reaction was found to be 3.6 ± 0.2 M–1 s–1 in TrxR assay buffer at pH 7.4 and 6.6 ± 0.3 M–1 s–1 in GR assay buffer at pH 6.9. With 100 µM NADPH and 25 µM MB, we observed a decrease in absorbance of 0.0062 min–1, corresponding to a turnover of 1 µM NADPH per min. Using NADH instead of NADPH, the reaction rates were very similar (Table 2). This is also true when the rates were measured in anaerobic cuvettes.
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TABLE 2. Second-order rate constants for the reaction of MB with biologically relevant reductants under aerobic conditions
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Enzyme-catalyzed conversion of MB to leucoMB under aerobic conditions. The problem of keeping leucoMB in the reduced state by the NADPH/disulfide reductase system in the presence of O2 remained to be solved. The production of leucoMB under aerobic conditions is of interest for the study of further properties of this compound, particularly with the goal of using leucoMB (methylene white) as an uncolored drug formulation.
At neutral pH, the auto-oxidation rate for leucoMB is so fast that very high disulfide reductase activities must be present to reinforce MB reduction and to stabilize the product leucoMB. This is probably the case in mitochondrion-containing cells where the activities of the disulfide reductases are in the range of 1 to 10 units/ml cytosolic space and the oxygen concentration is below 10 µM (34, 43). For practical purposes, we chose pH 5.0 under aerobic conditions for our in vitro experiments. At this pH, MB was quantitatively bleached, that is, reduced, by NADPH in a P. falciparum GR- or TrxR-catalyzed reaction; this was shown by the disappearance of the absorption at 613 nm. The resulting leucoMB was found to be kinetically stable at pH 5.0, but it was visibly reoxidized after the NADPH had been consumed. The addition of NADPH (final concentration, 50 µM) led to bleaching again, and this cycle could be repeated. Thus, the enzymatic reduction of MB can be considered to be a quasiphysiological analogue of the chemical blue bottle experiment (1).
On the basis of these observations, one may approach enzyme-stabilized pharmaceutical formulations of leucoMB in colorless antimalarial syrups, which are preferred to blue ones by some patients (2, 39). The nature of the formulation will of course not change the systemic redox equilibria between MB and leucoMB. As measured in anaerobic cuvettes, leucoMB has no absorption in the visible range; the absorption coefficient at 258 nm is 17.4 mM–1 cm–1, and it is 3.30 mM–1 cm–1 at 340 nm. leucoMB is kinetically unstable in the presence of micromolar concentrations of O2 and auto-oxidizes readily. The midpoint potential of the pair MB/leucoMB is +10 mV (Table 1). In contrast to MB, leucoMB has two biochemically relevant pKa values between pH 4 and pH 6 (Table 1), which implies that it is partially charged at pH 7. Nevertheless, leucoMB is poorly soluble at neutral pH (<40 µM at 25°C) and tends to precipitate. In many redox reactions, leucoMB results from the two-electron reduction of MB; alternatively, MB can be reduced by one electron, which results in the uncharged MB radical. Two molecules of this species readily disproportionate to give MB and leucoMB (41). In mitochondrion-containing cells, the O2 concentration is probably 100-fold lower than that in erythrocytes, and the ratio of NADPH to NADP+ is higher than 10. This means that the predominant species in cytosolic spaces is uncolored leucoMB. In urine that is stained blue or green by MB, a mixture of MB and leucoMB is excreted (47).
MB as an inhibitor of disulfide reductases. The inhibitory effects of MB on the physiological reactions of the enzymes studied (equations 1 to 3) are summarized in Table 3. As a case in point, MB is an inhibitor of recombinant Plasmodium GR with a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) value in the low micromolar range (23). The type of inhibition could not be unambiguously determined, but it was not competitive. Assuming that it is noncompetitive (23) rather than uncompetitive (12), the IC50 values in Table 3 correspond to the Ki values. When MB acts as an inhibitor of human GR, it is probably bound at the inhibitory site in the central cavity between the two subunits (49, 59).
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TABLE 3. Activities of the disulfide reductases studied as MB reductasesa
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MB as a substrate of disulfide reductases. The potential of MB as a substrate for the enzymes investigated is shown in Table 3; for this purpose, enzyme activities were measured with the physiological disulfide substrate and the artificial substrate MB in parallel. Assays with MB as a substrate were performed with 1 U enzyme per ml, whereas 10 mU/ml was employed for assays with the cognate substrate. It should be noted that in situ the enzyme concentrations (>1 U ml–1) (34, 43) are indeed >100-fold higher than those normally used in enzyme kinetic studies in vitro (10 mU/ml).
MB reduction by NAD(P)H was measured using the enzymatic optical test at 340 nm for NAD(P)H oxidation. At this wavelength,
values were determined to be 3.90 mM–1 cm–1 for MB and 3.30 mM–1 cm–1 for leucoMB (Table 1). The antidromic contribution of the product leucoMB to the overall absorbance decrease was neglected, as under aerobic conditions leucoMB is auto-oxidized at a high rate so that the concentration of MB remains constant and the concentration of leucoMB is very low. The reaction proceeded until all NAD(P)H was consumed; the steepest part of the slope was taken for determining the reaction rate.
Corrections for the spontaneous reaction of MB with NAD(P)H (Table 2) and for the NAD(P)H auto-oxidase activities of the respective enzymes were accounted for as described in Materials and Methods.
Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase, reaching a catalytic efficiency of more than 105 M–1 s–1, was found to be an excellent catalyst for MB reduction (Table 3). The catalytic efficiency of an enzyme, kcat/KM, often represents the second-order rate constant for the rate-limiting step. This illustrates that the disulfide reductases act as efficient catalysts for the reduction of MB by NAD(P)H, with the spontaneous reaction rate (k = 3.6 M–1 s–1) being enhanced 103- to 105-fold in the presence of the enzymes.
In conclusion, MB not only inhibits the natural reactions of the enzymes but also serves as a subversive substrate since the product leucoMB is auto-oxidized back to MB with the concomitant production of reactive oxygen species (Fig. 1). The possible cell biochemical and cell-pathological consequences are discussed below.
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FIG. 1. MB as a redox-cycling substrate of P. falciparum GR. The disulfide reductase catalyzes the reduction of MB by NADPH. The resulting leucoMB, a most efficient auto-oxidator, is then oxidized by O2. From a cell pharmacologic perspective, each reaction cycle, catalyzed by the MB-enzyme ensemble, leads to the consumption of NADPH and O2 and to the production of parasitotoxic reactive oxygen species, predominantly to H2O2.
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To study the role of the thiols, we prepared mutants lacking either cysteine residue (Cys58Ala and Cys63Ala) or both cysteines (Cys58Ala/Cys63Ala). Compared to the wild type, with these mutants the kcat values for MB reduction increased by a factor of more than 20 (Table 3). This supports the notion that it is the flavin rather than the thiols that mediates MB reduction by disulfide reductases and other flavoenzymes. The double mutant Cys58Ala/Cys63Ala can be visibly reduced by NADPH, thereby losing the absorption of oxidized flavin at around 455 nm, and it can be reoxidized by adding MB (Fig. 2A and B). Assuming that this reoxidation represents the following reaction, we estimated the second-order rate constant k, correcting for instantaneous auto-oxidation of the product leucoMB and the intrinsic auto-oxidation activity of protein-bound FADH–:
![]() | (9) |
NADP+ + leucoMB, with a value of 8,900 M–1 s–1 (Table 3), indicating that the oxidation of FADH– by MB is probably the rate-limiting step in the overall enzyme-catalyzed reaction.
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FIG. 2. Reduction of a flavoprotein (human GR mutant A58/A63) with NADPH and reoxidation by O2 or by MB in assay buffer at pH 6.9. (A) The black curve shows the original spectrum of the oxidized flavoprotein (8.2 µM) with an absorption maximum at 455 nm. The protein-bound FAD was then reduced with 200 µM NADPH under aerobic conditions to give FADH–. This resulted in a decrease in the absorption at 455 nm by 78% (not shown). Subsequent auto-oxidation led to partially reoxidized protein-bound flavin and indirectly to the production of NADP+ (gray curve). Here, the characteristic broad peak at around 680 nm represents the complex between protein-bound FADH– and NADP+ (33). The original spectrum of oxidized protein-bound flavin (black curve) was recovered after 20 min by auto-oxidation and was 10 times faster by oxidation with 3 µM MB (Fig. 2B). (B). Traces representing the kinetics of FADH– reoxidation by MB. Mutant flavoprotein (9.2 µM) had been incubated under aerobic conditions in GR assay buffer containing 0 to 3 µM MB and monitored at 455 nm in a total volume of 700 µl. The addition of NADPH at 100 µM led to a decrease in the absorption at 455 nm. Reoxidation took place according to the equation protein-bound FADH– + MB+ protein-bound FAD + leucoMB, with leucoMB being auto-oxidized instantaneously. The highest rate of absorbance increase was 0.120 min–1. Using a ![]() of 9.0 mM–1 cm–1 for the difference between reduced flavin and oxidized flavin and correcting for the auto-oxidation of reduced flavin, the second-order rate constant for the reaction of equation 9 was estimated to be 7,500 ± 1,200 M–1 s–1 (15, 33). Solid curve, 3 µM MB; dashed-dotted curve, 0.6 µM MB; dotted curve, 0 µM MB.
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These observations for the EH4 forms, together with our results for Cys-free mutants, support the notion that the reduced flavin ring is responsible for MB reduction and diaphorase activity in general by disulfide reductases. The site of contact between reduced flavin and MB remains to be established. Crystallographic studies on human GR soaked with MB described by Zappe (59) revealed an MB binding site close to the contact zone between the nicotinamide of NADPH and the flavin (Fig. 3). Those crystallographic experiments must be extended to other disulfide reductases.
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FIG. 3. Scheme of dimeric human GR representing the active-site geometry of disulfide reductases. There are two identical active sites per homodimeric enzyme. The dimer interface is shown as a diagonal line, with a central filled circle representing the twofold symmetry axis as viewed from above. The reducing equivalents flow from the nicotinamide of NADPH via the flavin to the active-site disulfide, which is reduced to give the catalytic dithiol. Subsequent dithiol-disulfide exchanges lead to the reduction of the substrate GSSG (R1-S-S-R2, with R1 equaling R2). Two binding sites for MB have been identified by crystallography at low resolution, an intersubunit cavity at the twofold axis and a site close to the nicotinamide-binding site (30, 59). In the case of LipDH, the disulfide of lipoamide binds as R1-S-S-R2 at the disulfide site; in the case of TrxR, it is the peripheral disulfide of the other subunit which binds here.
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Furthermore, NAD(P)H and O2, which are needed for the pathogen's metabolism, are consumed in the pathological reaction cycles, and the NADPH-to-NADP+ ratio is likely to be affected. GSSG, the physiological substrate of GR, is expected to be more slowly reduced, which leads to toxic effects of GSSG. In addition, there is less GSH available in the parasite as a substrate of GSH S-transferase for the detoxification of heme and other lipophilic compounds (10).
When extrapolating these findings to in vivo conditions, we assume that the GR activity in P. falciparum is 3 to 10 U/ml under Vmax conditions (2, 33); the kcat for MB is 1.6% of that for GSSG, which is approximately 100 mU/ml. With a concentration of MB of 30 µM and a KM value for MB of 50 µM (Table 3), the turnover rate can be estimated to be 40 mU/ml or 40 µM/min at 25°C and 100 µM/min at 40°C, the temperature of a malaria attack. It should also be noted that the concentrations of the cognate substrates in the disulfide form are likely to be low because a high dithiol-to-disulfide ratio is maintained by the disulfide reductases. Consequently, when assuming a concentration of 0.5 µM for P. falciparum TrxR in situ, this enzyme is probably as important for turning over MB as P. falciparum GR. In contrast, human GR has a kcat value of only 0.03 s–1, which indicates that under MB therapy, less than 0.5% of glucose consumption of healthy and parasitized erythrocytes will be used for maintaining the MB-driven redox cycle in erythrocytes. With respect to human TrxR, this enzyme is not present in erythrocytes (26, 35).
Binding properties of MB. Quantitative biochemical and pharmacological studies can be complicated by the binding properties of MB (Table 1). MB dimerizes, with the dissociation constant being 170 µM (3). This means that at 10 µM total MB, 90% is monomeric, but at 100 µM, only 59% is present as a monomer. MB is reversibly bound to proteins in an unspecific or a specific manner. Indeed, this property is used in protein crystallization experiments. If the emerging microcrystals are stainable with MB, they are most likely to consist of protein and not of buffer components. Crystals of colorless proteins turn blue, but the crystals of the yellow FAD-containing disulfide reductases turn green when incubated with MB (Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Protein crystals of human GR with (A) and without (B) bound MB. In the oxidized form, GR is a yellow enzyme; thus, the color of the enzyme and the blue of MB yield green crystals.
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When parasitized red blood cells and normal erythrocytes are incubated together in MB-containing solution, the drug becomes concentrated selectively in the parasitized erythrocytes (2). The mechanism that leads to this sequestration is not clear but may be due to the binding of MB to structures in the parasite. Another hypothesis is that MB is reduced to uncharged leucoMB, which easily permeates the membrane of the digestive vesicles and is auto-oxidized to the MB cation and is thus trapped in the vesicles. It should be noted that this is not a weak base effect but a redox mechanism.
One major reason for the renewed interest in MB as an antiparasitic compound is that it fulfils the criteria for a BONARIA drug (11, 34). In the acronym BONARIA, BON stands for safe and efficacious, A stands for affordable, R stands for registered, and IA stands for internationally accessible. MB is a registered drug that has been used in clinical work for many decades, mainly in pediatric clinics as an antidote against methemoglobinemia-inducing toxic compounds (16, 51). This means that the extreme costs of drug development, a major obstacle when new drug programs against diseases of the poor are considered, can be reduced. Due to the fact that parasite resistance develops faster than drug development, new approaches for the treatment of parasitic diseases are urgently needed. To counteract drug resistance development, a general recommendation is to search for drug combinations rather than to use a single drug. Along these lines, our group found synergistic effects of MB in combination with artemisinin derivatives when drug combinations were tested against P. falciparum in culture (2). Additionally, a combination of MB and chloroquine (BlueCQ) has been tested in vitro and in clinical trials in Burkina Faso (39, 40). Due to the rapid spread of chloroquine-resistant strains, also in West Africa, chloroquine is not a suitable partner drug anymore. Consequently, other MB-containing antimalarial drug combinations are being tested in clinical pilot studies (A. Zoungrana, O. Müller, R. H. Schirmer, et al., unpublished data).
Flavoenzymes of trypanosomes and leishmania are also of interest as targets of MB since this compound has been shown to be effective against African trypanosomes in vitro (14). When tested against Trypanosoma cruzi enzymes, MB was found to be a subversive substrate of LipDH and a strong inhibitor of the trypanosomatid-specific disulfide reductase trypanothione reductase (R. L. Krauth-Siegel, S. Gromer, et al., unpublished data).
The support provided by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Be 1540/4-4 and subproject B2 of the SFB 544 Control of Tropical Infectious Diseases) is gratefully acknowledged.
Published ahead of print on 29 October 2007. ![]()
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Glu exchange in human glutathione reductase. Implications for the design of antiparasitic drugs. Biochemistry 32:4060-4066.[CrossRef][Medline]
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