Human infection with Toxoplasma gondii
is an important cause of morbidity and mortality. Protozoan
parasites such as T. gondii are incapable of de
novo purine biosynthesis and must acquire purines from
their host, so the purine salvage pathway offers a number
of potential targets for antiparasitic chemotherapy. In
T. gondii tachyzoites, adenosine is the predominantly
salvaged purine nucleoside, and thus adenosine kinase is
a key enzyme in the purine salvage pathway of this parasite.
The structure of T. gondii adenosine kinase was
solved using molecular replacement and refined by simulated
annealing at 1.8 Å resolution to an R-factor
of 0.214. The overall structure and the active site geometry
are similar to human adenosine kinase, although there are
significant differences. The T. gondii adenosine
kinase has several unique features compared to the human
sequence, including a five-residue deletion in one of the
four linking segments between the two domains, which is
probably responsible for a major change in the orientation
of the two domains with respect to each other. These structural
differences suggest the possibility of developing specific
inhibitors of the parasitic enzyme.