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1.
Variant surface glycoproteins (VSG) of Trypanosoma brucei are released in a water soluble form on impairment of membrane integrity. We have previously shown that this release is the result of an enzyme-mediated event which converts the hydrophobic membrane form VSG into the hydrophilic water-soluble form. We now present further details of the methods by which membrane form VSG ( mfVSG ) may be isolated, uncontaminated by water-soluble VSG ( sVSG ). The sensitivity to different metal ions of the enzyme that mediated the conversion event is discussed, and some biochemical characteristics of different mfVSG preparations are presented.  相似文献   

2.
Variant surface glycoproteins (VSG) of Trypanosoma brucei are released in a water soluble form on impairment of membrane integrity. We have previously shown that this release is the result of an enzyme-mediated event which converts the hydrophobic membrane form VSG into the hydrophilic water-soluble form. We now present further details of the methods by which membrane form VSG (mfVSG) may be isolated, uncontaminated by water-soluble VSG (sVSG). The sensitivity to different metal ions of the enzyme that mediated the conversion event is discussed, and some biochemical characteristics of different mfVSG preparations are presented.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane form of Trypanosoma brucei variant surface glycoprotein (mfVSG) is acylated with ester-linked tetradecanoic (myristic) acid (Ferguson, M. A. J., and Cross, G. A. M. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3011-3015). Comparative analysis of Pronase peptides from mfVSG and soluble VSG localizes the site of mfVSG acylation to a COOH-terminal oligosaccharide structure. Chemical and enzymatic treatment of the acylated Pronase mfVSG fragment revealed that the myristic acid is present as a diglyceride (sn-1,2-dimyristin) that is probably linked to the COOH-terminal oligosaccharide via a phosphodiester bond between the sn-3-glycerol hydroxyl and a sugar hydroxyl group. The endogenous membrane-associated enzyme, which quantitatively cleaves myristic acid from mfVSG to produce soluble VSG, releases diglyceride, as would be expected of a phospholipase C.  相似文献   

4.
1. Variant surface glycoprotein (VSGs) of Trypanosoma brucei-brucei may exist as a disulfide-linked dimer in both forms: myristylated (mfVSG) and non-myristylated (sVSG), as judge by fluorography and immunoblotting of SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions. 2. The dimeric VSG form is labeled with [3H]-myristic acid in our incorporation conditions. 3. AnTat 1.1 trypanosomes preincubated with tunicamycin and incubated with [3H]-myristic acid synthesized a labeled molecule that has an apparent molecular weight slightly smaller than the native form, and that also corresponds to a disulfide-linked dimer.  相似文献   

5.
In the mammalian host, the unicellular flagellate Trypanosoma brucei is covered by a dense surface coat that consists of a single species of macromolecule, the membrane form of the variant surface glycoprotein (mfVSG). After uptake by the insect vector, the tsetse fly, bloodstream-form trypanosomes differentiate to procyclic forms in the fly midgut. Differentiation is characterized by the loss of the mfVSG coat and the acquisition of a new surface glycoprotein, procyclin. In this study, the change in surface glycoprotein composition during differentiation was investigated in vitro. After triggering differentiation, a rapid increase in procyclin-specific mRNA was observed. In contrast, there was a lag of several hours before procyclin could be detected. Procyclin was incorporated and uniformly distributed in the surface coat. The VSG coat was subsequently shed. For a single cell, it took 12-16 h to express a maximum level of procyclin at the surface while the loss of the VSG coat required approximately 4 h. The data are discussed in terms of the possible molecular arrangement of mfVSG and procyclin at the cell surface. Molecular modeling data suggest that a (Asp-Pro)2 (Glu-Pro)22-29 repeat in procyclin assumes a cylindrical shape 14-18 nm in length and 0.9 nm in diameter. This extended shape would enable procyclin to interdigitate between the mfVSG molecules during differentiation, exposing epitopes beyond the 12-15-nm-thick VSG coat.  相似文献   

6.
Surface proteins of the mammalian stage of the parasitic protozoan, Trypanosoma brucei, were biotinylated with sulfosuccinimidyl 6-(biotinamido) hexanoate. Since the predominant protein labeled by this reagent is the membrane form of the variant surface glycoprotein (mfVSG), a procedure was developed to convert mfVSG to its soluble form by the endogenous glycosylphosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C while retaining other biotinylated surface proteins in a membrane-bound state. From these membranes, three novel glycoproteins of 60, 65, and 75 kDa could be isolated by a combination of Triton X-114 phase separation and precipitations by streptavidin and concanavalin A coupled to solid supports. These polypeptides were detected in trypanosomes expressing different mfVSGs and are thus considered to be invariant. In a variant clone in which the mfVSG is trypsin-sensitive, the invariant surface glycoproteins of 65 and 75 kDa, designated ISG65 and ISG75, respectively, were proteolytically degraded with similar kinetics as the mfVSG. Neither ISG65 nor ISG75 could be detected in procyclic trypanosomes, the stage of the parasite characteristic for the insect midgut. Gene cloning reported in the accompanying paper (Ziegelbauer, K., Multhaup, G., and Overath, P. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 10797-10803) suggests that ISG65 and ISG75 are transmembrane proteins.  相似文献   

7.
The conversion of the membrane-form variant surface glycoprotein (mfVSG) of the unicellular parasitic flagellate Trypanosoma brucei to soluble variant surface glycoprotein and sn-1,2-dimyristoyl glycerol is catalyzed by an endogeneous, membrane bound phospholipase C-like hydrolase. Using a monoclonal antibody against the enzyme the hydrolase was purified 3,000-fold with a yield of 32%. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 39,000 as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The rate with which mfVSG hydrolase cleaves phosphatidylinositol is 170 times lower than the cleavage rate for mfVSG, whereas phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylcholine cannot serve as substrates. Reconstitution experiments into phospholipid vesicles show that the enzyme can hydrolyze mfVSG when present in the same phospholipid bilayer but not when present in separate bilayers.  相似文献   

8.
African trypanosomes contain a membrane-bound enzyme capable of removing dimyristylglycerol from the membrane-attached form of the variable surface glycoprotein (mfVSG; Ferguson, M. A. J., K. Halder, and G. A. M. Cross, 1985, J. Biol Chem., 260:4963-4968). Although mfVSG phospholipase-C has been implicated in the removal of the VSG from the trypanosome surface (Cardoso de Almeida, M. L., and M. J. Turner, 1983, Nature (Lond.)., 302:349-352; Ferguson, M. A. J., K. Halder, and G. A. M. Cross, 1985, J. Biol Chem., 260:4963-4968), its precise function and subcellular location have not been determined. We have developed a procedure for the separation of the cell fractions and organelles of Trypanosoma brucei brucei (and other trypanosome species) by differential sucrose and isopycnic PercollR centrifugation. These fractions were tested for mfVSG phospholipase activity using Trypanosoma brucei mfVSG labeled with 3H-myristic acid as substrate. The highest enzyme-specific activity was associated with the flagella and evidence is presented to suggest that it is localized in the flagellar pocket. Some activity was also associated with the Golgi complex. These results suggest that the mfVSG phospholipase is localized primarily in the membrane of the flagella pocket and possibly other membrane organelles derived from and associated with this structure, and may be part of the VSG-membrane recycling system in African trypanosomes. The activity of mfVSG phospholipase amongst various trypanosome species was determined. We show that, in contrast to the bloodstream forms of Trypanosoma brucei, cultured procyclic Trypanosoma brucei and bloodstream Trypanosoma vivax had little or no mfVSG phospholipase activity. The activity found in bloodstream forms of Trypanosoma congolense was intermediate between Trypanosoma vivax and Trypanosoma brucei.  相似文献   

9.
Decay-accelerating factor (DAF) is an integral membrane protein that inhibits amplification of the complement cascade on the cell surface. We and other investigators have shown that DAF is part of a newly characterized family of proteins that are anchored to the cell membrane by phosphatidylinositol (PI). The group includes the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) of African trypanosomes, the p63 protein of Leishmania, acetylcholinesterase (AChE), alkaline phosphatase, Thy-1, 5'-nucleotidase, and RT6.2--an alloantigen from rat T cells. The structure of the membrane anchor has been best characterized for VSG, but chemical studies of the membrane anchors of AChE and Thy-1 suggest that similar glycolipid moieties anchor these proteins to the cell surface. In the VSG, the membrane anchor consists of an ethanolamine linked covalently to an oligosaccharide and glucosamine; the entire complex is anchored to the cell membrane by PI. Immunologically, this glycolipid defines an epitope, the cross-reacting determinant (CRD), that is only revealed after removal of the diacyl glycerol anchor by a phospholipase C. By Western blotting, we show here that DAF-S (DAF released from the membrane by PI-specific phospholipase C [PIPLC]) also contains CRD. Using a newly developed immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) in which the solid-phase capturing antibody is a monoclonal antibody to DAF and the second antibody is anti-CRD, we have been able to quantitate DAF-S. By IRMA, we show that the reaction between anti-CRD and DAF-S is specific, since the binding is competitively inhibited only by the soluble form of the VSG. These observations further support the concept that the glycolipid anchors of this new family of proteins have similar structures. DAF is also found as a soluble protein in various tissue fluids as well as in Hela cell supernatants. No evidence for the presence of the CRD epitope was found on these proteins, suggesting that these forms of DAF are not released from the surface of cells by endogenous phospholipases.  相似文献   

10.
R Bülow  P Overath  J Davoust 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2384-2388
The membrane form of the variant surface glycoprotein (mfVSG) is anchored in the plasma membrane of Trypanosoma brucei by a dimyristoylphosphatidylinositol residue connected via a glycan to the COOH-terminal amino acid. The glycoprotein molecules are tightly packed, forming a coat that is impenetrable to lytic serum components. Lateral diffusion of mfVSG was measured by the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching technique. mfVSG labeled on the cell surface with rhodamine-conjugated anti-VSG Fab fragments showed a diffusion coefficient of 1 X 10(-10) cm2/s at 37 degrees C and of 0.7 X 10(-10) cm2/s at 27 degrees C. About 80% of the molecules were mobile. Affinity-purified mfVSG molecules implanted into the plasma membrane of baby hamster kidney cells exhibited a similar mobility to that found in the trypanosome coat [D = (0.4-0.7) X 10(-10) cm2/s at 4 degrees C]. Phospholipid mobility in the plasma membrane of trypanosomes was characterized by a diffusion coefficient of 2.2 X 10(-9) cm2/s at 37 degrees C. It is concluded that mfVSG mobility in the surface coat of the parasite is rapid and comparable to that of other membrane-bound glycoproteins but slower than that of phospholipids.  相似文献   

11.
Using transformed procyclic trypanosomes, the synthesis, intracellular transport and secretion of wild-type and mutant variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) is characterized. We find no impediment to the expression of this bloodstream stage protein in insect stage cells. VSG receives a procyclic-type phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C-resistant glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor, dimerizes and is N-glycosylated. It is transported to the plasma membrane with rapid kinetics (t(1/2) approximately 1 h) and then released by a cell surface zinc-dependent metalloendoprotease activity, a possible homolog of leishmanial gp63. Deletion of the C-terminal GPI addition signal generates a soluble form of VSG that is exported with greatly reduced kinetics (t(1/2) approximately 5 h). Fusion of the procyclic acidic repetitive protein (PARP) GPI anchor signal to the C-terminus of the truncated VSG reporter restores both GPI addition and transport competence, suggesting that GPI anchors play a critical role in the folding and/or forward transport of newly synthesized VSG. The VSG-PARP fusion is also processed near the C-terminus by events that do not involve N-linked oligosaccharides and which are consistent with GPI side chain modification. This unexpected result suggests that GPI processing may be influenced by adjacent peptide sequence or conformation.  相似文献   

12.
The GPI residues of soluble variant surface glycoprotein (sVSG) molecules released from the membrane of African trypanosomes during infection induce macrophage activation events. In this study, we demonstrate that the trypanosome sVSG molecule binds to the membrane of murine RAW 264.7 macrophages and activates the NF-kappaB cascade independently of a TLR-mediated interaction. The binding of fluorochrome-labeled sVSG molecules to macrophage membranes was saturable, was inhibited by the scavenger receptor-specific ligand maleylated BSA, and was followed by rapid intracellular uptake of the molecules and subsequent internalization to lysosomal compartments. Inhibition of cellular phagocytic and endocytic uptake processes by cytochalasin B and monodansylcadaverine, respectively, revealed that sVSG internalization was necessary for IkappaBalpha degradation and occurred by an actin-dependent, clathrin-independent process. Activation of RAW 264.7 cells by sVSG following treatment of the cells with the TRAF6 inhibitory peptide DIVK resulted in enhanced NF-kappaB signaling, suggesting both that TRAF6-dependent TLR activation of the pathway alone is not required for signaling and that TLR pathway components may negatively regulate expression of sVSG-induced signaling. These results demonstrate that stimulation of macrophages by sVSG involves a complex process of receptor-mediated binding and uptake steps, leading to both positive and negative signaling events that ultimately regulate cellular activation.  相似文献   

13.
The COOH terminus of the externally disposed variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) of the eukaryotic pathogenic protozoan Trypanosoma brucei strain 427 variant MITat 1.4 (117) is covalently linked to a novel phosphatidylinositol-containing glycolipid. This conclusion is supported by analysis of the products of nitrous acid deamination or Staphylococcus aureus phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C treatment of purified membrane-form VSG. Lysis of trypanosomes is accompanied by release of soluble VSG, catalyzed by activation of an endogenous phospholipase C. The only apparent difference between membrane-form VSG and soluble VSG is the removal of sn-1,2-dimyristylglycerol. The COOH-terminal glycopeptide derived by Pronase digestion of soluble VSG was characterized by chemical modification and digestion with alkaline phosphatase. The results are consistent with the single non-N-acetylated glucosamine residue being the reducing terminus of the oligosaccharide and in a glycosidic linkage to a myo-inositol monophosphate that is probably myo-inositol 1,2-cyclic monophosphate. A partial structure for the VSG COOH-terminal moiety is presented. This structure represents a new type of eukaryotic post-translational protein modification and membrane anchor. We discuss the relevance of this structure to observations that have been made with other eukaryotic membrane proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Trypanosome variant surface glycoproteins (VSGs) have a novel glycan-phosphatidylinositol membrane anchor, which is cleavable by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. A similar structure serves to anchor some membrane proteins in mammalian cells. Using kinetic and ultrastructural approaches, we have addressed the question of whether this structure directs the protein to the cell surface by a different pathway from the classical one described in other cell types for plasma membrane and secreted glycoproteins. By immunogold labeling on thin cryosections we were able to show that, intracellularly, VSG is associated with the rough endoplasmic reticulum, all Golgi cisternae, and tubulovesicular elements and flattened cisternae, which form a network in the area adjacent to the trans side of the Golgi apparatus. Our data suggest that, although the glycan-phosphatidylinositol anchor is added in the endoplasmic reticulum, VSG is nevertheless subsequently transported along the classical intracellular route for glycoproteins, and is delivered to the flagellar pocket, where it is integrated into the surface coat. Treatment of trypanosomes with 1 microM monensin had no effect on VSG transport, although dilation of the trans-Golgi stacks and lysosomes occurred immediately. Incubation of trypanosomes at 20 degrees C, a treatment that arrests intracellular transport from the trans-Golgi region to the cell surface in mammalian cells, caused the accumulation of VSG molecules in structures of the trans-Golgi network, and retarded the incorporation of newly synthesized VSG into the surface coat.  相似文献   

15.
MexA, a periplasmic component of OprM-MexA-MexB tripartite multidrug efflux pump from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is natively anchored via its fatty acid in the bacteria inner membrane protruding into the periplasm. We used supported lipid bilayer (SLB) to attach the protein to a single leaflet mimicking its perisplamic orientation. For that purpose, we studied the solubilization of DOPC lipid bilayer supported on silica surface with β-octyl glucoside (βOG). First we showed that SLBs resist to βOG concentrations that usually solubilize liposomes. Native form of MexA was directly inserted in the outer leaflet at (βOG concentrations in a range of 20–25 mM). Second, observations by cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) revealed a dense protein layer attached to the surface corresponding to a 13-nm layer of MexA proteins. Analysis of protein densities allows proposing a schematic organization of native MexA inserted in lipid membrane. This structural organization provides further insights with respect to the partially solved structure of the soluble form. Presented at the joint biannual meeting of the SFB-GEIMM-GRIP, Anglet France, 14–19 October, 2006.  相似文献   

16.
The channel-forming domain of colicin E1 is composed of a soluble helical bundle which, upon membrane binding, unfolds to form an extended, two-dimensional helical net in the membrane interfacial layer. To characterize the pathway of unfolding of the protein and the structure of the surface-bound intermediate, the time-course of intra-protein distance changes and unfolding on a millisecond time-scale were determined from the kinetics of changes in the efficiency of fluorescence resonance energy transfer, and of the donor-acceptor overlap integral, between each of six individual tryptophan residues and a Cys-conjugated energy transfer acceptor (C509-AEDANS). Comparison of the rate constants revealed the following order of events associated with unfolding of the protein at the membrane surface: (A) movement of the hydrophobic core helices VIII-IX, coincident with a small change in Trp-Cys509 distances of the outer helices; (B) unfolding of surface helices in the helical bundle in the order: helix I, helices III, IV, VI, VII, and helix V; (C) a slow (time-scale, seconds) condensation of the surface-bound helices. The rate of protein unfolding events increased with increasing anionic lipid content. Unfolding did not occur below the lipid thermal phase transition, indicating that unfolding requires mobility in the interfacial layer. The structure of the two-dimensional membrane-bound intermediate in the steady-state was inferred to consist of a quasi-circular arrangement of eight helices embedded in the membrane interfacial layer and anchored by the hydrophobic helical hairpin. The pathway of unfolding of the colicin channel at the membrane surface, catalyzed by electrostatic and hydrophobic forces, is the first described for a membrane-active protein. It is proposed that the pathway and principles described for the colicin protein are relevant to membrane protein import.  相似文献   

17.
We established an in vitro assay for the addition of glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors to proteins using procyclic trypanosomes engineered to express GPI-anchored variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). The assay is based on the premise that small nucleophiles, such as hydrazine, can substitute for the GPI moiety and effect displacement of the membrane anchor of a GPI-anchored protein or pro-protein causing release of the protein into the aqueous medium. Cell membranes containing pulse-radiolabeled VSG were incubated with hydrazine, and the VSG released from the membranes was measured by carbonate extraction, immunoprecipitation, and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis/fluorography. Release of VSG was time- and temperature-dependent, was stimulated by hydrazine, and occurred only for VSG molecules situated in early compartments of the secretory pathway. No nucleophile-induced VSG release was seen in membranes prepared from cells expressing a VSG variant with a conventional transmembrane anchor (i.e. a nonfunctional GPI signal sequence). Pro-VSG was shown to be a substrate in the reaction by assaying membranes prepared from cells treated with mannosamine, a GPI biosynthesis inhibitor. When a biotinylated derivative of hydrazine was used instead of hydrazine, the released VSG could be precipitated with streptavidin-agarose, indicating that the biotin moiety was covalently incorporated into the protein. Hydrazine was shown to block the C terminus of the released VSG hydrazide because the released material, unlike a truncated form of VSG lacking a GPI signal sequence, was not susceptible to proteolysis by carboxypeptidases. These results firmly establish that the released material in our assay is VSG hydrazide and strengthen the proof that GPI anchoring proceeds via a transamidation reaction mechanism. The reaction could be inhibited with sulfhydryl alkylating reagents, suggesting that the transamidase enzyme contains a functionally important sulfhydryl residue.  相似文献   

18.
The variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) of the ILTat 1.3 variant of Trypanosoma brucei has two asparagine-linked glycan moieties, as well as a phosphatidylinositol glycan membrane anchor. We have investigated the structure and processing of each of these oligosaccharides through analysis of the intact protein and of glycopeptides. Processing has been examined by comparing glycan structures purified from an immature intracellular form (58 kDa) of VSG with those of the mature form (59 kDa) found on the parasite surface. We find exclusively high mannose oligosaccharides (Man4-7-GlcNAc2) at Asn-432 in both the immature 58-kDa and mature 59-kDa forms. In contrast, the "core" oligosaccharide of Asn-419 (Man3-GlcNAc2) appears to be nearly quantitatively processed to a complex biantennary structure [Gal-GlcNAc-Man)2-Man-GlcNAc2) during VSG maturation. The asparagine-linked structures at Asn-419, but not those at Asn-432, are resistant to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H within 30 s of biosynthesis. This suggests possible novel and selective mechanisms for glycosylation in African trypanosomes. Finally, we show that the carboxyl-terminal glycolipid is galactosylated (3-4 residues) relatively late in VSG biosynthesis. Phosphatidylinositol glycans have been identified on a growing number of eukaryotic membrane proteins. This report provides a direct demonstration of the processing of such a glycolipid anchor following its attachment to protein.  相似文献   

19.
Bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and specific lipid molecules self-assemble into a quasi two-dimensional lattice structure known as the purple membrane (PM). In the PM, BR molecules exist in a trimeric form with lipid molecules present in the space enclosed by each trimeric unit and in the inter-trimer space. These trimeric units, which have a roughly circular cross-section, are arranged in hexagonal patterns with long-ranged crystalline order. In this work, we investigate the self-assembly of BR in the PM via Monte Carlo simulations of a two-dimensional model of the membrane and proteins. The protein molecules are modeled as 120 degrees sectors of a circle and the lipid molecules enter into the model through effective protein-protein interactions. The sectors cannot overlap with each other, and in addition to this excluded volume interaction there are site-site attractive interactions between specific points of the proteins to mimic interactions between helices on the proteins and lipid-induced interactions. At low values of the attractive well depth, the proteins are found in the monomeric form at all concentrations. At moderate and high values of the attractive well depth, trimers are formed as the concentration increases, and with a further increase in concentration the trimers organize into a hexagonal lattice. The interactions between the proteins and those induced by the intra-trimer lipids play an equally important role in the formation of trimers and the lattice. The lipids in the inter-trimer space cause the trimers to orient in a specific direction in the hexagonal crystal lattice.  相似文献   

20.
The cell surface of African trypanosomes is covered by a densely packed monolayer of a single protein, the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). The VSG protects the trypanosome cell surface from effector molecules of the host immune system and is the mediator of antigenic variation. The sequence divergence between VSGs that is necessary for antigenic variation can only occur within the constraints imposed by the structural features necessary to form the monolayer barrier. Here, the structures of the two domains that together comprise the C-terminal di-domain of VSG ILTat1.24 have been determined. The first domain has a structure similar to the single C-terminal domain of VSG MITat1.2 and provides proof of structural conservation in VSG C-terminal domains complementing the conservation of structure present in the N-terminal domain. The second domain, although based on the same fold, is a minimized version missing several structural features. The structure of the second domain contains the C-terminal residue that in the native VSG is attached to a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor that retains the VSG on the external face of the plasma membrane. The solution structures of this domain and a VSG GPI glycan have been combined to produce the first structure-based model of a GPI-anchored protein. The model suggests that the core glycan of the GPI anchor lies in a groove on the surface of the domain and that there is a close association between the GPI glycan and protein. More widely, the GPI glycan may be an integral part of the structure of other GPI-anchored proteins.  相似文献   

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