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1.
The enzyme NADH-fumarate reductase associated with the membrane fraction of Trypanosoma brucei procyclic trypomastigotes, can be solubilized by more than 50% when increasing the ionic strength to the equivalent of 150 mM KCl. The apparent KMs for NADH (125 microM) and fumarate (50 microM) remain close to those previously reported for the membrane-bound form of this enzyme. Other electron acceptors (i.e. oxygen or cytochrome c) appear to accept electrons in the absence of fumarate (KM for cytochrome c = 50 microM). The drug L-092,201 (Merck, Sharp and Dohme Research Laboratories, Rahway, NJ), an inhibitor of the membrane-bound fumarate reductase, also blocked the solubilized enzyme. Given the relatively high ionic strength of the intracellular environment we propose that, in vivo, the enzyme fumarate reductase is in the mitochondrial matrix or in the soluble fraction of another intracellular compartment.  相似文献   

2.
In all trypanosomatids, including Trypanosoma brucei, glycolysis takes place in peroxisome-like organelles called glycosomes. These are closed compartments wherein the energy and redox (NAD(+)/NADH) balances need to be maintained. We have characterized a T. brucei gene called FRDg encoding a protein 35% identical to Saccharomyces cerevisiae fumarate reductases. Microsequencing of FRDg purified from glycosome preparations, immunofluorescence, and Western blot analyses clearly identified this enzyme as a glycosomal protein that is only expressed in the procyclic form of T. brucei but is present in all the other trypanosomatids studied, i.e. Trypanosoma congolense, Crithidia fasciculata and Leishmania amazonensis. The specific inactivation of FRDg gene expression by RNA interference showed that FRDg is responsible for the NADH-dependent fumarate reductase activity detected in glycosomal fractions and that at least 60% of the succinate secreted by the T. brucei procyclic form (in the presence of d-glucose as the sole carbon source) is produced in the glycosome by FRDg. We conclude that FRDg plays a key role in the energy metabolism by participating in the maintenance of the glycosomal NAD(+)/NADH balance. We have also detected a significant pyruvate kinase activity in the cytosol of the T. brucei procyclic cells that was not observed previously. Consequently, we propose a revised model of glucose metabolism in procyclic trypanosomes that may also be valid for all other trypanosomatids except the T. brucei bloodstream form. Interestingly, H. Gest has hypothesized previously (Gest, H. (1980) FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 7, 73-77) that a soluble NADH-dependent fumarate reductase has been present in primitive organisms and evolved into the present day fumarate reductases, which are quinol-dependent. FRDg may have the characteristics of such an ancestral enzyme and is the only NADH-dependent fumarate reductase characterized to date.  相似文献   

3.
The mitochondrial electron transfer chain present in the procyclic form of the African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei contains both cytochrome c oxidase and an alternative oxidase (TAO) as terminal oxidases that reduce oxygen to water. By contrast, the electron transfer chain of the primitive mitochondrion present in the bloodstream form of T. brucei contains only TAO as the terminal oxidase. TAO functions in the bloodstream forms to oxidize the ubiquinol produced by the glycerol-3-phosphate shuttle that results in the oxidation of the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate produced by glycolysis. The function, however, of TAO in the procyclic forms is unknown. In this study, we found that inhibition of TAO by the specific inhibitor salicylhydroxamic acid stimulates the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in trypanosome mitochondria, resulting in mitochondrial alteration and increased oxidation of cellular proteins. Moreover, the activity and protein content of TAO in procyclic trypanosomes were increased when cells were incubated in the presence of hydrogen peroxide or antimycin A, the cytochrome bc1 complex inhibitor, which also results in increased ROS production. We suggest that one function of TAO in procyclic cells may be to prevent ROS production by removing excess reducing equivalents and transferring them to oxygen.  相似文献   

4.
The mitochondrial respiratory chain is comprised of four different protein complexes (I–IV), which are responsible for electron transport and generation of proton gradient in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. This proton gradient is then used by FoF1-ATP synthase (complex V) to produce ATP by oxidative phosphorylation. In this study, the respiratory complexes I, II, and III were affinity purified from Trypanosoma brucei procyclic form cells and their composition was determined by mass spectrometry. The results along with those that we previously reported for complexes IV and V showed that the respiratome of Trypanosoma is divergent because many of its proteins are unique to this group of organisms. The studies also identified two mitochondrial subunit proteins of respiratory complex IV that are encoded by edited RNAs. Proteomics data from analyses of complexes purified using numerous tagged component proteins in each of the five complexes were used to generate the first predicted protein-protein interaction network of the Trypanosoma brucei respiratory chain. These results provide the first comprehensive insight into the unique composition of the respiratory complexes in Trypanosoma brucei, an early diverged eukaryotic pathogen.Mitochondria are dynamic organelles essential for cellular life, death, and differentiation of virtually every eukaryotic cell. They house systems for energy production through oxidative phosphorylation, synthesis of key metabolites, and iron-sulfur cluster assembly. The oxidative phoshorylation system of eukaryotic mitochondria comprises five major complexes located in the mitochondrial (mt)1 inner membrane, and often abbreviated as mt complexes I–V. The redox energy of the substrates NADH and succinate is first converted into an electrochemical proton potential across the inner mt membrane by respiratory complexes I (NADH:ubiquinone reductase), II (SDH, succinate:ubiquinone reductase), III (bc1, ubiquinone:cytochrome c reductase), and IV (cytochrome c oxidase). The electrochemical proton potential is then used by complex V (FoF1-ATP synthase) to synthesize ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate, a mechanism that has essentially remained unchanged from bacteria to human (1). However, parasitic organisms have exploited unique energy metabolic pathways by adapting to their natural host habitats (2). Indeed, the respiratory systems of parasites typically show greater diversity in electron transfer pathways than those of their host, and Trypanosoma brucei is no exception to this rule (3).T. brucei, the causative agent of human African trypanosomiasis (HAT), or sleeping sickness, is a blood-borne pathogenic parasite transmitted by tsetse flies. It has a complex life cycle that alternates between the bloodstream forms (BF) in the mammalian host and several stages in the insect vector starting with the procyclic form (PF) in the midgut. During T. brucei differentiation between the distinct life-cycle stages, the mitochondrion undergoes morphological and functional changes, and the parasite switches its energy metabolism from amino acid to glucose oxidation (4). BF cells, which live in sugar-rich environment, use energy metabolism predominantly through the glycolytic pathway (5). They contain no cytochrome-mediated respiratory chain and they possess a unique electron transport chain in the mitochondria, the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and the salicyl hydroxamic acid (SHAM)-sensitive alternative oxidase, which is known as the trypanosome alternative oxidase (TAO) (6). Despite the absence of complete cytochrome-containing complexes III and IV in BF trypanosomes, a mt membrane potential is maintained and involves the hydrolytic activity of the FoF1-ATP synthase complex (7). Conversely, PF cells are dependent on the cytochrome-containing respiratory chain and ATP generated by conventional function of the FoF1-ATP synthase complex for their energy production (8, 9). The branched electron-transport chain contains four complexes that donate electrons to the ubiquinone pool, two NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases (complex I and a rotenone-insensitive enzyme), complex II, and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Reduced ubiquinol can be reoxidized by the transfer of electron to either the TAO, which does not translocate protons, or to the cytochrome-containing complexes III and IV that produce a proton motive force by translocation of protons and thus create essential membrane potential (10).Although the T. brucei genome has been sequenced (11), little information is available on the subunit composition of mt complexes I–V based on similarity searches. However, some respiratory complexes have been partially characterized in other trypanosomatids such as Crithidia fasciculata, T. cruzi, and Leishmania tarentolae (1215). In recent studies, we have determined the protein composition of complexes IV and V, and part of complex I purified from mitochondria of T. brucei PF cells (8, 16, 17, 25). These analyses revealed the uniqueness of respiratory complexes in trypanosomes, where large numbers of component proteins have no homologs outside of the Kinetoplastida.In this study, we focus on the comprehensive characterization of all respiratory complexes in T. brucei, collectively termed the respiratome. We report the composition of complexes II and III from PF cells, and extend the characterization of complex I by identifying additional protein constituents. This included the identification of two subunits of the respiratory complex IV, both encoded by mt edited RNAs. We also present a predicted protein-protein interaction network of the respiratome, which was generated using proteomics data collected from numerous tagged proteins in each of the complexes I–V. Our results provide a comprehensive insight into the unique composition of the respiratory complexes in one of the life-cycle stages of T. brucei.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Trypanosoma brucei procyclic trypomastigotes were made permeable by using digitonin (0-70 micrograms/mg of protein). This procedure allowed exposure of coupled mitochondria to different substrates. Only succinate and glycerol phosphate (but not NADH-dependent substrates) were capable of stimulating oxygen consumption. Fluorescence studies on intact cells indicated that addition of succinate stimulates NAD(P)H oxidation, contrary to what happens in mammalian mitochondria. Addition of malonate, an inhibitor of succinate dehydrogenase, stimulated NAD(P)H reduction. Malonate also inhibited intact-cell respiration and motility, both of which were restored by further addition of succinate. Experiments carried out with isolated mitochondrial membranes showed that, although the electron transfer from succinate to cytochrome c was inhibitable by antimycin, NADH-cytochrome c reductase was antimycin-insensitive. We postulate that the NADH-ubiquinone segment of the respiratory chain is replaced by NADH-fumarate reductase, which reoxidizes the mitochondrial NADH and in turn generates succinate for the respiratory chain. This hypothesis is further supported by the inhibitory effect on cell growth and respiration of 3-methoxyphenylacetic acid, an inhibitor of the NADH-fumarate reductase of T. brucei.  相似文献   

7.
Two succinate thiokinase activities specific for either adenine or guanine nucleotides have been found in Trypanosoma brucei. Key glycolytic and citric acid cycle enzymes were measured to show repression of glycolysis and derepression of the citric acid cycle in the procyclic form, relative to the bloodstream form. A marked rise in adenine-linked succinate thiokinase activity accompanied a rise in activity of citric acid cycle enzymes. However, guanine-linked succinate thiokinase was found to increase only slightly in activity. These results implicate the adenine-linked enzyme as an essential component of the citric acid cycle, whereas the guanine-linked enzyme appears to be under separate control. This communication also reports for the first time the occurrence of citrate synthase activity in the bloodstream (long slender) form of T. brucei.  相似文献   

8.
In Trypanosomatids, endocytosis and exocytosis occur exclusively at the flagellar pocket, a deep invagination of the plasma membrane where the flagellum extends from the cell. Both bloodstream and procyclic trypanosomes are capable of internalizing macromolecules. However, structures resembling coated vesicles were only identified in bloodstream form and not in procyclic form trypanosomes. Due to the apparent absence of coated vesicles in procyclics, the significance of receptor-mediated endocytosis in procyclic trypanosomes has been considered of minimal importance. We show that the flagellar pocket associated cysteine-rich acidic transmembrane protein (CRAM) may function as an high density lipoprotein receptor in the procyclic form trypanosome. Using anti-CRAM IgG we have characterized the process of CRAM-mediated endocytosis in procyclic form trypanosomes. The wild type procyclic trypanosome binds and internalizes anti-CRAM IgG but not the non-immune IgG in a saturable and time-dependent manner; the binding and uptake of (125)I-labeled anti-CRAM IgG are inhibited by excess unlabeled anti-CRAM IgG. Uptake and degradation of anti-CRAM IgG do not occur at 4 degrees C. At 28 degrees C, the internalized anti-CRAM IgG were efficiently degraded through a process that is inhibited by incubation at 4 degrees C and sensitive to the presence of chloroquine. The uptake and degradation of anti-CRAM IgG does not occur in the CRAM null mutant cell line. These results suggested that the uptake of anti-CRAM IgG in the wild type procyclics occurs via receptor-mediated endocytosis of the CRAM protein. Deletion of the cytoplasmic extension of CRAM drastically reduced the degradation but not the binding of anti-CRAM IgG. This result indicated that potential internalization signals may be present in the cytoplasmic extension of CRAM. This is the first time that the importance of receptor-mediated endocytosis in procyclic form trypanosomes has been demonstrated.  相似文献   

9.
Apoptosis is a phenomenon previously associated exclusively with metazoan organisms. We show here that procyclic insect form Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense, a protozoan parasite, when treated in vitro with concanavalin A displayed several features normally associated with apoptosis in metazoan cells. Lectin treatment induced cleavage of nuclear DNA into oligonucleosomal fragments, suggesting activation of an endogenous nuclease in the parasite. Treated trypanosomes, although agglutinated and non-motile, exhibited fluorescence after treatment with the vital stain fluorescein diacetate and retained (3)H-uridine indicating that their cell membranes remained intact during the period of DNA fragmentation. Electron micrographs showed characteristic morphology of cells undergoing apoptosis, including surface membrane vesiculation and migration of chromatin to the periphery of the nuclear membrane while mitochondria remained intact. These results suggest that treatment with concanavalin A triggers a cell death mechanism in T. b. rhodesiense similar to the process of apoptosis described in metazoa.  相似文献   

10.
Acetyl:succinate CoA-transferase (ASCT) is an acetate-producing enzyme shared by hydrogenosomes, mitochondria of trypanosomatids, and anaerobically functioning mitochondria. The gene encoding ASCT in the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei was identified as a new member of the CoA transferase family. Its assignment to ASCT activity was confirmed by 1) a quantitative correlation of protein expression and activity upon RNA interference-mediated repression, 2) the absence of activity in homozygous Deltaasct/Deltaasct knock out cells, 3) mitochondrial colocalization of protein and activity, 4) increased activity and acetate excretion upon transgenic overexpression, and 5) depletion of ASCT activity from lysates upon immunoprecipitation. Genetic ablation of ASCT produced a severe growth phenotype, increased glucose consumption, and excretion of beta-hydroxybutyrate and pyruvate, indicating accumulation of acetyl-CoA. Analysis of the excreted end products of (13)C-enriched and (14)C-labeled glucose metabolism showed that acetate excretion was only slightly reduced. Adaptation to ASCT deficiency, however, was an infrequent event at the population level, indicating the importance of this enzyme. These studies show that ASCT is indeed involved in acetate production, but is not essential, as apparently it is not the only enzyme that produces acetate in T. brucei.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The procyclic stage of Trypanosoma brucei, a parasitic protist responsible for sleeping sickness in humans, converts most of the consumed glucose into excreted succinate, by succinic fermentation. Succinate is produced by the glycosomal and mitochondrial NADH-dependent fumarate reductases, which are not essential for parasite viability. To further explore the role of the succinic fermentation pathways, we studied the trypanosome fumarases, the enzymes providing fumarate to fumarate reductases. The T. brucei genome contains two class I fumarase genes encoding cytosolic (FHc) and mitochondrial (FHm) enzymes, which account for total cellular fumarase activity as shown by RNA interference. The growth arrest of a double RNA interference mutant cell line showing no fumarase activity indicates that fumarases are essential for the parasite. Interestingly, addition of fumarate to the medium rescues the growth phenotype, indicating that fumarate is an essential intermediary metabolite of the insect stage trypanosomes. We propose that trypanosomes use fumarate as an essential electron acceptor, as exemplified by the fumarate dependence previously reported for an enzyme of the essential de novo pyrimidine synthesis (Takashima, E., Inaoka, D. K., Osanai, A., Nara, T., Odaka, M., Aoki, T., Inaka, K., Harada, S., and Kita, K. (2002) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 122, 189-200).  相似文献   

13.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity was measured in procyclic forms of Trypanosoma brucei brucei grown in semidefined medium. ODC activity rapidly increased in late log-phase cells which were resuspended in fresh medium. A biphasic induction curve similar to that observed in mammalian cells was observed over an 18-hr period. ODC activity increased 4.5- to 25-fold over control levels measured at zero time. Actinomycin D and cycloheximide inhibited induction by greater than 90%. Polyamines at a level not inhibitory to growth (10 microM) inhibited ODC induction, but only by 30-50%, late in the induction period. Putrescine inhibited the first peak of induction and suppressed activity at 14 hr by 75%. Polyamine analogs such as bis(ethyl)spermidine were not effective suppressors of ODC activity. The half-life of ODC in procyclic forms grown in the presence of cycloheximide was greater than 6 hr, while that of bloodstream trypomastigotes in mice treated with cycloheximide was 5 hr. A single dose of the ODC inhibitor DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine given to infected rats or mice suppressed trypanosome ODC activity greater than 90% for more than 7 hr. These studies indicate that although trypanosome ODC increases rapidly under log growth conditions, it is less susceptible to fluctuation and external control than the enzyme from mammalian sources. The latter may be a factor in the clinical efficacy of ODC inhibitors.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Abstract. Teneral Glossina morsitans centralis and G. brevipalpis were fed in vitro upon medium containing procyclic Trypanosoma brucei brucei derived from the midguts of G. m. centralis or G. brevipalpis which had immature trypanosome infections. The tsetse were then maintained on rabbits and, on day 31, were dissected to determine the infection rates. In G. m. centralis the midgut and salivary gland infection rates by T. b. brucei were 46.0% and 27.0% with procyclic trypanosomes from G. m. centralis, and 45.4% and 24.7% with procyclic trypanosomes from G. brevipalpis, respectively. In G. brevipalpis the rates were 20.2% and 0.0% with procyclic trypanosomes from G. m. centralis, and 28.0% and 0.0% with procyclic trypanosomes from G. brevipalpis, respectively. Teneral G. m. centralis and G. brevipalpis were also fed similarly upon procyclic T. b. brucei derived from G.m.centralis or G. brevipalpis on day 31 of infection, the former tsetse species had mature infections while the latter were without infections in the salivary glands. In G.m.centralis the infection rates in the midgut and salivary glands were 48.9% and 17.0%, and 38.0% and 17.0% when fed on procyclic trypanosomes from G.m.centralis and G. brevipalpis, respectively. In G. brevipalpis the rates were 21.5% and 0.0%, and 10.7% and 0.0% with procyclic trypanosomes of G.m.centralis and G. brevipalpis origin, respectively. Thus, procyclic T. b. brucei from susceptible G.m.centralis could not complete cyclical development in refractory G. brevipalpis, whereas those from G. brevipalpis developed to metatrypanosomes in the salivary glands of G.m.centralis. Teneral and 15-day-old non-teneral G.m.centralis were fed in vitro upon heparinized goat's blood containing T. b. brucei bloodstream trypomastigotes, or upon medium containing procyclic T. b. brucei derived from G.m.centralis with mature infections. On day 31 their infection rates were determined. The infection rates by T. b. brucei in the midgut and salivary glands of G.m.centralis fed on the infected blood were 70.4% and 40.4% when fed as teneral tsetse, as against 15.3% and 4.0% when fed as non-teneral tsetse. Those tsetse which were fed on the medium containing procyclic trypanosomes showed rates of 50.0% and 25.6%, as against 11.6% and 2.5%, respectively. It would appear, therefore, that maturation of T. b. brucei in tsetse is probably not determined simply by an interaction between lectin and procyclic trypanosomes in the midgut of non-teneral tsetse, but it is the result of a complex interaction between many interrelated physiological factors of both the trypanosome and the tsetse vector.  相似文献   

17.
Protein film voltammetry is used to probe the energetics of electron transfer and substrate binding at the active site of a respiratory flavoenzyme--the membrane-extrinsic catalytic domain of Escherichia coli fumarate reductase (FrdAB). The activity as a function of the electrochemical driving force is revealed in catalytic voltammograms, the shapes of which are interpreted using a Michaelis-Menten model that incorporates the potential dimension. Voltammetric experiments carried out at room temperature under turnover conditions reveal the reduction potentials of the FAD, the stability of the semiquinone, relevant protonation states, and pH-dependent succinate--enzyme binding constants for all three redox states of the FAD. Fast-scan experiments in the presence of substrate confirm the value of the two-electron reduction potential of the FAD and show that product release is not rate limiting. The sequence of binding and protonation events over the whole catalytic cycle is deduced. Importantly, comparisons are made with the electrocatalytic properties of SDH, the membrane-extrinsic catalytic domain of mitochondrial complex II.  相似文献   

18.
The procyclic form of Trypanosoma brucei is a parasitic protozoan that normally dwells in the midgut of its insect vector. In vitro, this parasite prefers d-glucose to l -proline as a carbon source, although this amino acid is the main carbon source available in its natural habitat. Here, we investigated how l -proline is metabolized in glucose-rich and glucose-depleted conditions. Analysis of the excreted end products of (13)C-enriched l -proline metabolism showed that the amino acid is converted into succinate or l -alanine depending on the presence or absence of d-glucose, respectively. The fact that the pathway of l -proline metabolism was truncated in glucose-rich conditions was confirmed by the analysis of 13 separate RNA interference-harboring or knock-out cell lines affecting different steps of this pathway. For instance, RNA interference studies revealed the loss of succinate dehydrogenase activity to be conditionally lethal only in the absence of d-glucose, confirming that in glucose-depleted conditions, l -proline needs to be converted beyond succinate. In addition, depletion of the F(0)/F(1)-ATP synthase activity by RNA interference led to cell death in glucose-depleted medium, but not in glucose-rich medium. This implies that, in the presence of d-glucose, the importance of the F(0)/F(1)-ATP synthase is diminished and ATP is produced by substrate level phosphorylation. We conclude that trypanosomes develop an elaborate adaptation of their energy production pathways in response to carbon source availability.  相似文献   

19.
Proline metabolism has been studied in procyclic form Trypanosoma brucei. These parasites consume six times more proline from the medium when glucose is in limiting supply than when this carbohydrate is present as an abundant energy source. The sensitivity of procyclic T. brucei to oligomycin increases by three orders of magnitude when the parasites are obliged to catabolize proline in medium depleted in glucose. This indicates that oxidative phosphorylation is far more important to energy metabolism in this latter case than when glucose is available and the energy needs of the parasite can be fulfilled by substrate level phosphorylation alone. A gene encoding proline dehydrogenase, the first enzyme of the proline catabolic pathway, was cloned. RNA interference studies revealed the loss of this activity to be conditionally lethal. Proline dehydrogenase defective parasites grew as wild-type when glucose was available, but, unlike wild-type cells, they failed to proliferate using proline. In parasites grown in the presence of glucose, proline dehydrogenase activity was markedly lower than when glucose was absent from the medium. Proline uptake too was shown to be diminished when glucose was abundant in the growth medium. Wild-type cells were sensitive to 2-deoxy-D-glucose if grown using proline as the principal carbon source, but not in glucose-rich medium, indicating that this non-catabolizable glucose analogue might also stimulate repression of proline utilization. These results indicate that the ability of trypanosomes to use proline as an energy source can be regulated depending upon the availability of glucose.  相似文献   

20.
Contrary to Leishmania spp. and Trypanosoma cruzi, Trypanosoma brucei bloodstream forms do not synthesise their own sterols but take these compounds in the form of cholesterol directly from the mammalian host. However, procyclic insect stages synthesise ergosterol rather than cholesterol. Here the sub-cellular localisation of the first committed enzyme of this pathway of isoprenoid synthesis 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase in T. brucei procyclics (0.9 nmol x min(-1) x mg(-1) protein) was carried out using both cell-fractionation by isopycnic centrifugation and digitonin-titration experiments. The majority of the NADP+-linked 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase is a soluble enzyme present in the mitochondrial matrix with some additional membrane-associated activity in glycosomes and possibly in the endoplasmic reticulum. It is suggested that the active metabolism of threonine and/or leucine as preferred 2-carbon source for the incorporation of acetyl units into lipids and/or sterols in the mitochondrion of T. brucei procyclics is the explanation for a high 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase activity in these protozoan organelles.  相似文献   

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