Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 1997
The drug cyclosporin A (CsA) exerts its immunosuppressive action by binding to the cytosolic protein, cyclophilin (CyP) and, as a complex, binding to and inhibiting the calcium/calmodulin-dependent serine threonine phosphatase, calcineurin. It is unknown whether a similar mode of action occurs during the drug's antiparasite activity. Calmodulin-binding proteins from the helminth parasites Hymenolepis microstoma and H. diminuta were purified by affinity chromatography, yielding single polypeptide bands of 60000 Mr, according to SDS–PAGE. These proteins were tested for calcineurin activity by the dephosphorylation of the RII peptide (part of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase). Both proteins were calcium- and calmodulin-dependent and were inhibited by mammalian cyclophilin complexed with cyclosporin A (IC50 values of 0·75 μg CyP for H. microstoma and 0·90 μg CyP for H. diminuta). However, neither of the parasite calcineurins was inhibited by H. microstoma cyclophilin/CsA. These data suggest the anthelmintic mode of action of CsA in these helminth models does not involve the inhibition of a signal transduction pathway requiring interaction with calcineurin.