Abstract
Trypanosoma cruzi, the agent of Chagas' disease, an ailment characterized by a progressive chronic fibrotic myocarditis and degeneration of tissues that are innervated by the autonomic nervous system, is a voracious sialic acid eater from glycoconjugates of the surrounding medium. This is accomplished through an active trans-sialidase residing on the surface membrane of the trypomastigote stage, which is the parasite form that invades vertebrate cells. The existence of the enzyme was proposed and established only 7 years ago and yet a flood of information on the subject is already available. Trans-sialidase is able to reversibly transfer sialic acid alpha(2-->3)-linked to an external Gal beta from the host cell surface sialoglycoconjugates to a terminal Gal beta of an appropriate acceptor on the parasite surface. In the absence of an acceptor, the enzyme acts as a hydrolase transferring sialic acid to water. Trans-sialidase belongs to a highly heterogeneous gene family of surface molecules sharing with ea...

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