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1.
Sophisticated systems for cell-cell communication enable unicellular microbes to act as multicellular entities capable of group-level behaviors that are not evident in individuals. These group behaviors influence microbe physiology, and the underlying signaling pathways are considered potential drug targets in microbial pathogens. Trypanosoma brucei is a protozoan parasite that causes substantial human suffering and economic hardship in some of the most impoverished regions of the world. T. brucei lives on host tissue surfaces during transmission through its tsetse fly vector, and cultivation on surfaces causes the parasites to assemble into multicellular communities in which individual cells coordinate their movements in response to external signals. This behavior is termed “social motility,” based on its similarities with surface-induced social motility in bacteria, and it demonstrates that trypanosomes are capable of group-level behavior. Mechanisms governing T. brucei social motility are unknown. Here we report that a subset of receptor-type adenylate cyclases (ACs) in the trypanosome flagellum regulate social motility. RNA interference-mediated knockdown of adenylate cyclase 6 (AC6), or dual knockdown of AC1 and AC2, causes a hypersocial phenotype but has no discernible effect on individual cells in suspension culture. Mutation of the AC6 catalytic domain phenocopies AC6 knockdown, demonstrating that loss of adenylate cyclase activity is responsible for the phenotype. Notably, knockdown of other ACs did not affect social motility, indicating segregation of AC functions. These studies reveal interesting parallels in systems that control social behavior in trypanosomes and bacteria and provide insight into a feature of parasite biology that may be exploited for novel intervention strategies.  相似文献   

2.
African trypanosomes express a family of dually acylated, EF-hand calcium-binding proteins called the calflagins. These proteins associate with lipid raft microdomains in the flagellar membrane, where they putatively function as calcium signaling proteins. Here we show that these proteins bind calcium with high affinity and that their expression is regulated during the life cycle stage of the parasite, with protein levels approximately 10-fold higher in the mammalian bloodstream form than in the insect vector procyclic stage. We also demonstrate a role for the calflagins in mammalian infection, as inhibition of the entire calflagin family by RNA interference dramatically increased host survival and attenuated parasitemia in a mouse model of sleeping sickness. In contrast to infection with parental wild-type parasites, which demonstrated an unremitting parasitemia and death within 6 to 10 days, infection with calflagin-depleted parasites demonstrated prolonged survival associated with a sudden decrease in parasitemia at approximately 8 days postinfection. Subsequent relapsing and remitting waves of parasitemia thereafter were associated with alternate expression of the variant surface glycoprotein, suggesting that initial clearance was antigen specific. Interestingly, despite the notable in vivo phenotype and flagellar localization of the calflagins, in vitro analysis of the calflagin-deficient parasites demonstrated normal proliferation, flagellar motility, and morphology. Further analysis of the kinetics of surface antibody clearance also did not demonstrate a deficit in the calflagin-deficient parasites; thus, the molecular basis for the altered course of infection is independent of an effect on parasite cell cycle progression, motility, or degradation of surface-bound antibodies.The protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of African sleeping sickness, a fatal disease endemic to regions throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Incidence rates of human T. brucei infection have risen dramatically in the past 30 to 50 years, leading to renewed emphasis by the World Health Organization on disease surveillance and control among the millions of people at risk of infection. T. brucei also infects cattle to cause nagana, a disease which renders vast regions unsuitable for livestock and poses a major barrier to economic development in afflicted areas (30).T. brucei is transmitted to its mammalian host via the bite of the infected tsetse fly, when parasites are introduced into the host circulation during a blood meal. To thrive in both the insect vector and the mammalian host, T. brucei has evolved digenetic life cycle stages; the two most commonly studied life cycle stages are the procyclic stage from the fly midgut and the bloodstream form found in the mammalian host. Programmed differentiation between these stages regulates broad aspects of parasite biology, enabling adaptation to either environment. In the mammalian host, avoiding clearance by the humoral immune response is particularly important, and T. brucei has evolved sophisticated mechanisms to this end. Bloodstream form parasites are covered by a thick monolayer of variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) that blocks the access of host antibodies to underlying invariant antigens (2). VSG is highly immunogenic, and VSG-specific antibodies facilitate the clearance of parasites from the blood. However, the parasite undergoes antigenic variation, a process whereby the parasite spontaneously switches from the expression of a single VSG type to that of another of the hundreds in its genomic repertoire. The new parasite clone is resistant to the existing antibodies and persists until antibodies to the new VSG are produced, thus selecting for another antigen variant and propagating the cycle. T. brucei has coevolved with primates for millions of years, and antigenic variation is not its sole means of immune evasion. Additional mechanisms such as host immunosuppression (20), motility-driven internalization and degradation of surface-bound antibodies (13, 22), and the shedding of VSG molecules (7) are each likely to contribute to the survival of T. brucei in the hostile environment of its mammalian host. However, the signaling and genetic pathways by which T. brucei regulates stage-specific adaptations to its environment remain poorly understood.Calcium signaling plays critical roles in virtually every eukaryotic cell type, and trypanosomes are no exception. Regulated changes in intracellular calcium are important for trypanosome replication, differentiation, cell invasion, and virulence (24). The importance of calcium regulation in trypanosomes is further underscored by the presence of a specialized organelle, the acidocalcisome, which contains a major intracellular reservoir of calcium (9). Cellular responses to calcium fluctuations are mediated by calcium-binding proteins. In addition to calmodulin, T. brucei expresses a family of EF-hand proteins named the calflagins. They were discovered as the predominant T. brucei proteins to bind a hydrophobic resin in a calcium-dependent manner (35, 36). These proteins specifically localize to the flagellum, an organelle which, in addition to its obvious role in cellular motility, compartmentalizes signaling proteins, including adenylate cyclases and phosphodiesterases (26, 27). In the flagellum, calflagins associate with lipid raft microdomains, which in many cell types serve as recruitment platforms for signaling molecules (32). We have recently elucidated the role of acylation in calflagin trafficking and raft association and identified the calflagin-specific palmitoyl acyltransferase (11). However, the precise functions of these abundant proteins remain unknown. The calflagins show homology with Trypanosoma cruzi FCaBP, an immunodominant protein with similar flagellar enrichment yet an unidentified biologic function (12). Outside of the common EF-hand domains, the calflagins display only minimal homology to proteins in organisms outside the kinetoplastid lineage.To elucidate the function of T. brucei calflagins, we assessed the consequences of calflagin inhibition to T. brucei in vivo during host infection and in vitro. We can now report for the first time that calflagin expression influences the outcome of parasite infection, as mice infected with calflagin-deficient cells demonstrate a sudden decrease in parasitemia approximately 1 week postinfection. This drop is associated with prolonged host survival and outgrowth of parasites expressing alternative VSG molecules, indicating selective pressure against the initial dominant VSG molecule and suggesting that the primary deficit of calflagin-deficient cells is one of enhanced sensitivity to the host adaptive immune response. We demonstrate that the molecular mechanisms underlying this effect are not due to altered parasite proliferation, motility, or clearance of surface-bound antibodies.  相似文献   

3.
Trypanosoma brucei, a unicellular parasite, contains several single-copied organelles that duplicate and segregate in a highly coordinated fashion during the cell cycle. In the procyclic stage, a bi-lobed structure is found adjacent to the single ER exit site and Golgi apparatus, forming both stable and dynamic association with other cytoskeletal components including the basal bodies that seed the flagellum and the flagellar pocket collar that is critical for flagellar pocket biogenesis. To further understand the bi-lobe and its association with adjacent organelles, we performed proteomic analyses on the immunoisolated bi-lobe complex. Candidate proteins were localized to the flagellar pocket, the basal bodies, a tripartite attachment complex linking the basal bodies to the kinetoplast, and a segment of microtubule quartet linking the flagellar pocket collar and bi-lobe to the basal bodies. These results supported an extensive connection among the single-copied organelles in T. brucei, a strategy employed by the parasite for orderly organelle assembly and inheritance during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

4.
Li Z  Wang CC 《Eukaryotic cell》2008,7(11):1941-1950
Kinetoplastid membrane protein 11 (KMP-11) has been identified as a flagellar protein and is conserved among kinetoplastid parasites, but its potential function remains unknown. In a recent study, we identified KMP-11 as a microtubule-bound protein localizing to the flagellum as well as the basal body in both procyclic and bloodstream forms of Trypanosoma brucei (Z. Li, J. H. Lee, F. Chu, A. L. Burlingame, A. Gunzl, and C. C. Wang, PLoS One 3:e2354, 2008). Silencing of KMP-11 by RNA interference inhibited basal body segregation and cytokinesis in both forms and resulted in multiple nuclei of various sizes, indicating a continuous, albeit somewhat defective, nuclear division while cell division was blocked. KMP-11 knockdown in the procyclic form led to severely compromised formation of the new flagellum attachment zone (FAZ) and detachment of the newly synthesized flagellum. However, a similar phenotype was not observed in the bloodstream form depleted of KMP-11. Thus, KMP-11 is a flagellar protein playing critical roles in regulating cytokinesis in both forms of the trypanosomes. Its distinct roles in regulating FAZ formation in the two forms may provide a clue to the different mechanisms of cytokinetic initiation in procyclic and bloodstream trypanosomes.  相似文献   

5.
Membrane proteins were isolated from purified Trypanosoma brucei coated endocytotic vesicles by phase separation with Triton X-114. The largest abundant membrane protein was a doublet band with a molecular mass of about 77 kDa. A specific antiserum was prepared against this protein by immunization with antigen bands excised from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Immunoblot analyses with this antiserum showed that the 77-kDa protein was present in other T. brucei, in T. congolense, and in T. vivax bloodstream-stage parasites but absent from procyclic (tsetse fly midgut)-stage trypanosomes. Antigenically related molecules of 58, 300, and 15.5 kDa were also detected. The 300- and 15.5-kDa molecules were not in purified coated vesicles; they were detected in whole bloodstream- and procyclic-form T. brucei organisms. Immunofluorescent studies localized the antigen to the region between the flagellar pocket and the nucleus of bloodstream-form parasites. Ultrastructurally, the antigen was detected on membranes of endosomes and lysosome-like structures that contained endocytosed markers.  相似文献   

6.
The protozoan pathogen Trypanosoma brucei is transmitted between mammals by tsetse flies. The first compartment colonised by trypanosomes after a blood meal is the fly midgut lumen. Trypanosomes present in the lumen—designated as early procyclic forms—express the stage-specific surface glycoproteins EP and GPEET procyclin. When the trypanosomes establish a mature infection and colonise the ectoperitrophic space, GPEET is down-regulated, and EP becomes the major surface protein of late procyclic forms. A few years ago, it was discovered that procyclic form trypanosomes exhibit social motility (SoMo) when inoculated on a semi-solid surface. We demonstrate that SoMo is a feature of early procyclic forms, and that late procyclic forms are invariably SoMo-negative. In addition, we show that, apart from GPEET, other markers are differentially expressed in these two life-cycle stages, both in culture and in tsetse flies, indicating that they have different biological properties and should be considered distinct stages of the life cycle. Differentially expressed genes include two closely related adenylate cyclases, both hexokinases and calflagins. These findings link the phenomenon of SoMo in vitro to the parasite forms found during the first 4–7 days of a midgut infection. We postulate that ordered group movement on plates reflects the migration of parasites from the midgut lumen into the ectoperitrophic space within the tsetse fly. Moreover, the process can be uncoupled from colonisation of the salivary glands. Although they are the major surface proteins of procyclic forms, EP and GPEET are not essential for SoMo, nor, as shown previously, are they required for near normal colonisation of the fly midgut.  相似文献   

7.
Adenylyl cyclases (ACs) synthesize cAMP and are present in cells as transmembrane AC and soluble AC (sAC). In sperm, the cAMP produced regulates ion channels and it also activates protein kinase-A that in turn phosphorylates specific axonemal proteins to activate flagellar motility. In mammalian sperm, sAC localizes to the midpiece of flagella, whereas in sea urchin sperm sAC is along the entire flagellum. Here we show that in sea urchin sperm, sAC is complexed with proteins of the plasma membrane and axoneme. Immunoprecipitation shows that a minimum of 10 proteins is tightly associated with sAC. Mass spectrometry of peptides derived from these proteins shows them to be: axonemal dynein heavy chains 7 and 9, sperm specific Na+/H+ exchanger, cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channel, sperm specific creatine kinase, membrane bound guanylyl cyclase, cyclic GMP specific phosphodiesterase 5A, the receptor for the egg peptide speract, and alpha- and beta-tubulins. The sAC-associated proteins could be important in linking membrane signal transduction to energy utilisation in the regulation of flagellar motility.  相似文献   

8.
Phosphagen energy-buffering systems play an essential role in regulating the cellular energy homeostasis in periods of high-energy demand or energy supply fluctuations. Here we describe the phosphoarginine/arginine kinase system of the kinetoplastid parasite Trypanosoma brucei, consisting of three highly similar arginine kinase isoforms (TbAK1-3). Immunofluorescence microscopy using myc-tagged protein versions revealed that each isoform is located in a specific subcellular compartment: TbAK1 is exclusively found in the flagellum, TbAK2 in the glycosome, and TbAK3 in the cytosol of T. brucei. The flagellar location of TbAK1 is dependent on a 22 amino acid long N-terminal sequence, which is sufficient for targeting a GFP-fusion protein to the trypanosome flagellum. The glycosomal location of TbAK2 is in agreement with the presence of a conserved peroxisomal targeting signal, the C-terminal tripeptide ‘SNL’. TbAK3 lacks any apparent targeting sequences and is accordingly located in the cytosol of the parasite. Northern blot analysis indicated that each TbAK isoform is differentially expressed in bloodstream and procyclic forms of T. brucei, while the total cellular arginine kinase activity was 3-fold higher in bloodstream form trypanosomes. These results suggest a substantial change in the temporal and spatial energy requirements during parasite differentiation. Increased arginine kinase activity improved growth of procyclic form T. brucei during oxidative challenges with hydrogen peroxide. Elimination of the total cellular arginine kinase activity by RNA interference significantly decreased growth (>90%) of procyclic form T. brucei under standard culture conditions and was lethal for this life cycle stage in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. The putative physiological roles of the different TbAK isoforms in T. brucei are further discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The precise subcellular localization of the components of the cyclic AMP (cAMP) signaling pathways is a crucial aspect of eukaryotic intracellular signaling. In the human pathogen Trypanosoma brucei, the strict control of cAMP levels by cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases is essential for parasite survival, both in cell culture and in the infected host. Among the five cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases identified in this organism, two closely related isoenzymes, T. brucei PDEB1 (TbrPDEB1) (PDEB1) and TbrPDEB2 (PDEB2) are predominantly responsible for the maintenance of cAMP levels. Despite their close sequence similarity, they are distinctly localized in the cell. PDEB1 is mostly located in the flagellum, where it forms an integral part of the flagellar skeleton. PDEB2 is mainly located in the cell body, and only a minor part of the protein localizes to the flagellum. The current study, using transfection of procyclic trypanosomes with green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporters, demonstrates that the N termini of the two enzymes are essential for determining their final subcellular localization. The first 70 amino acids of PDEB1 are sufficient to specifically direct a GFP reporter to the flagellum and to lead to its detergent-resistant integration into the flagellar skeleton. In contrast, the analogous region of PDEB2 causes the GFP reporter to reside predominantly in the cell body. Mutagenesis of selected residues in the N-terminal region of PDEB2 demonstrated that single amino acid changes are sufficient to redirect the reporter from a cell body location to stable integration into the flagellar skeleton.In eukaryotes, the ubiquitous second messenger cyclic AMP (cAMP) is generated from ATP by membrane-integral or by cytoplasmic, CO2-regulated cyclases (35, 44). The cAMP signal is processed by a small group of receiver proteins, including the regulatory subunit of protein kinase A (28), cAMP-gated ion channels (4), and the guanine-nucleotide-exchange proteins EPAC1 and EPAC2 (39). The cAMP signal is terminated by the action of a family of cyclic nucleotide-specific phosphodiesterases (PDEs) (9). This paradigm is rather straightforward, involves a limited number of players, and is generally well understood, at least in mammalian cells. However, much less is known about how individual cAMP signals are temporally and spatially controlled. Since most eukaryotic adenylyl cyclases are integral membrane proteins, often restricted to specific membrane subdomains (10), cAMP signaling is usually initiated at the cell membrane (40). However, diffusion of cAMP away from its site of generation is rapid, with diffusion coefficients being about 400 μm2/s (8, 15, 29), translating into diffusion velocities of 30 to 40 μm/s. As a consequence, the signal would reach the center of the cell with a diameter of 3 μm within less than 50 ms and would rapidly saturate the entire cell. While regulation through fluctuating cellular levels of cAMP represents a valid paradigm of cAMP signaling, it has become clear that other, more localized modes of cAMP signaling must also exist. Several groups have shown that the cAMP response of a given cell can differ depending on what set of receptors activates the cyclase response (14, 30, 41, 42). Similarly, the cAMP response of endothelial cells depends on the subcellular site where the cAMP is produced. They tighten their barrier function when cAMP is produced by membrane-bound adenylyl cyclases but become more permeable when cAMP is produced in the cytoplasm (17, 45). The distinct subcellular localization of cAMP signals was experimentally demonstrated using an array of techniques (29, 40, 55, 56).Physically tethered PDEs might serve to confine newly synthesized cAMP to defined microdomains. Only cAMP-binding proteins that are localized within or extend into such microdomains would be able to receive the cAMP signal (17, 49). cAMP concentrations within such domains might rise and fall rapidly, reaching peak concentrations much more rapidly and locally far beyond the steady-state cAMP levels measured in whole-cell extracts. Such spatially organized, tethered PDEs can generate local sinks into which cAMP disappears (1, 23). This paradigm would allow the simultaneous presence of numerous local cAMP concentration gradients within a single cell, allowing great flexibility in signal generation and intracellular signal transmission. This concept is based on the distinct subcellular localization and physical association of PDEs with subcellular structures and on the existence of localized subcellular cAMP pools, for which there is extensive experimental support (3, 5, 13, 50, 52). Interestingly, PDEs localized in different subcellular regions may still be able to compensate for each other. Ablation of the cilium-specific PDE1C from the olfactory neurons in the mouse did not prolong response termination, as long as the cytoplasmic PDE4 in the cell body was still present (11).The unicellular eukaryote Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of human sleeping sickness in sub-Saharan Africa. It belongs to the large order of the kinetoplastida, which includes many medically and economically important pathogens of humans, their livestock, and their crops worldwide (27). Trypanosomes are very small cells (about 15 by 3 μm in diameter) that carry a single flagellum (10 by 0.5 μm). The volume of a procyclic trypanosome of strain 427 is (9.6 ± 0.8) × 10−14 liter (Markus Engstler, personal communication), with the flagellum representing about 15% of this. A signaling threshold concentration of 1 μM cAMP corresponds to just about 30,000 molecules of cAMP per cell. Given a diffusion coefficient of 400 μm2/s (29), unrestricted diffusion of cAMP would swamp the cell within 50 ms. Obviously, temporal and spatial control of cAMP signaling is crucial for T. brucei. Strategically located, physically tethered PDEs might thus play an important role in the architecture of the cAMP signaling pathways in T. brucei.The genomes of T. brucei and of other kinetoplastids, such as T. vivax, T. cruzi, Leishmania major, L. infantum, and L. braziliensis, all code for the same set of five cyclic nucleotide-specific PDEs (25, 53). In T. brucei, the genes for T. brucei PDEB1 (TbrPDEB1; subsequently termed PDEB1) and TbrPDEB2 (PDEB2) are tandemly arranged on chromosome 9 and code for two very similar cAMP-specific PDEs, each with two GAF (mammalian cyclic GMP-dependent PDEs, Anabaena adenylyl cyclases, Escherichia coli FhlA) domains (21) in their N-terminal regions (38, 57). These two PDEs were also studied experimentally in T. cruzi (12) and L. major (24, 52), and orthologues are present in all kinetoplastid genomes available so far. Despite their high overall sequence similarity, PDEB1 and PDEB2 exhibit distinct subcellular localizations (31). PDEB1 is predominantly found in the flagellum, where it is stably associated with cytoskeletal components that are resistant to detergent extraction. In contrast, PDEB2 is mostly localized in the cell body, from where it is fully extractable by nonionic detergents. However, a minor fraction of PDEB2 also associates with the flagellar skeleton in a Triton-resistant manner, most likely through interaction with PDEB1. Earlier work has shown that both PDEB1and PDEB2 are essential enzymes in bloodstream-form T. brucei (31), while TbPDEA, TbPDEC, and TbPDED play minor roles (20; S. Kunz, unpublished data).  相似文献   

10.
Neurons undergo long term, activity dependent changes that are mediated by activation of second messenger cascades. In particular, calcium-dependent activation of the cyclic-AMP/Protein kinase A signaling cascade has been implicated in several developmental processes including cell survival, axonal outgrowth, and axonal refinement. The biochemical link between calcium influx and the activation of the cAMP/PKA pathway is primarily mediated through adenylate cyclases. Here, dual imaging of intracellular calcium concentration and PKA activity was used to assay the role of different classes of calcium-dependent adenylate cyclases (ACs) in the activation of the cAMP/PKA pathway in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Surprisingly, depolarization-induced calcium-dependent PKA transients persist in barrelless mice lacking AC1, the predominant calcium-dependent adenylate cyclase in RGCs, as well as in double knockout mice lacking both AC1 and AC8. Furthermore, in a subset of RGCs, depolarization-induced PKA transients persist during the inhibition of all transmembrane adenylate cyclases. These results are consistent with the existence of a soluble adenylate cyclase that plays a role in calcium-dependent activation of the cAMP/PKA cascade in neurons.  相似文献   

11.
Class III adenylate cyclases (ACs) are widespread signaling proteins, which translate diverse intracellular and extracellular stimuli into a uniform intracellular signal. They are typically composed of an N-terminal array of input domains and transducers, followed C-terminally by a catalytic domain, which, as a dimer, generates the second messenger cAMP. The input domains, which receive stimuli, and the transducers, which propagate the signals, are often found in other signaling proteins. The nature of stimuli and the regulatory mechanisms of ACs have been studied experimentally in only a few cases, and even in these, important questions remain open, such as whether eukaryotic ACs regulated by G protein-coupled receptors can also receive stimuli through their own membrane domains. Here we survey the current knowledge on regulation and intramolecular signal propagation in ACs and draw comparisons to other signaling proteins. We highlight the pivotal role of a recently identified cyclase-specific transducer element located N-terminally of many AC catalytic domains, suggesting an intramolecular signaling capacity.  相似文献   

12.
FKBP12 proteins are able to inhibit TOR kinases or calcineurin phosphatases upon binding of rapamycin or FK506 drugs, respectively. The Trypanosoma brucei FKBP12 homologue (TbFKBP12) was found to be a cytoskeleton-associated protein with specific localization in the flagellar pocket area of the bloodstream form. In the insect procyclic form, RNA interference-mediated knockdown of TbFKBP12 affected motility. In bloodstream cells, depletion of TbFKBP12 affected cytokinesis and cytoskeleton architecture. These last effects were associated with the presence of internal translucent cavities limited by an inside-out configuration of the normal cell surface, with a luminal variant surface glycoprotein coat lined up by microtubules. These cavities, which recreated the streamlined shape of the normal trypanosome cytoskeleton, might represent unsuccessful attempts for cell abscission. We propose that TbFKBP12 differentially affects stage-specific processes through association with the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

13.
The flagellated eukaryote Trypanosoma brucei alternates between the insect vector and the mammalian host and proliferates through an unusual mode of cell division. Cell division requires flagellum motility‐generated forces, but flagellum motility exerts distinct effects between different life cycle forms. Motility is required for the final cell abscission of the procyclic form in the insect vector, but is necessary for the initiation of cell division of the bloodstream form in the mammalian host. The underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here we carried out functional analyses of a flagellar axonemal inner‐arm dynein complex in the bloodstream form and investigated its mechanistic role in cytokinesis initiation. We showed that the axonemal inner‐arm dynein heavy chain TbIAD5‐1 and TbCentrin3 form a complex, localize to the flagellum, and are required for viability in the bloodstream form. We further demonstrated the interdependence between TbIAD5‐1 and TbCentrin3 for maintenance of protein stability. Finally, we showed that depletion of TbIAD5‐1 and TbCentrin3 arrested cytokinesis initiation and disrupted the localization of multiple cytokinesis initiation regulators. These findings identified the essential role of an axonemal inner‐arm dynein complex in cell division, and provided molecular insights into the flagellum motility‐mediated cytokinesis initiation in the bloodstream form of T. brucei.  相似文献   

14.
The protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei lives in the bloodstream of vertebrates or in a tsetse fly. Expression of a GPI-phospholipase C polypeptide (GPI-PLCp) in the parasite is restricted to the bloodstream form. Events controlling the amount of GPI-PLCp expressed during differentiation are not completely understood. Our metabolic “pulse-chase” analysis reveals that GPI-PLCp is stable in bloodstream form. However, during differentiation of bloodstream to insect stage (procyclic) T. brucei, translation GPI-PLC mRNA ceases within 8 h of initiating transformation. GPI-PLCp is not lost precipitously from newly transformed procyclic trypanosomes. Nascent procyclics contain 400-fold more GPI-PLCp than established insect stage T. brucei. Reduction of GPI-PLCp in early-stage procyclics is linked to parasite replication. Sixteen cell divisions are required to reduce the amount of GPI-PLCp in newly differentiated procyclics to levels present in the established procyclic. GPI-PLCp is retained in strains of T. brucei that fail to replicate after differentiation of the bloodstream to the procyclic form. Thus, at least two factors control levels of GPI-PLCp during differentiation of bloodstream T. brucei; (i) repression of GPI-PLC mRNA translation, and (ii) sustained replication of newly transformed procyclic T. brucei. These studies illustrate the importance of repeated cell divisions in controlling the steady-state amount of GPI-PLCp during differentiation of the African trypanosome.  相似文献   

15.
The African trypanosome, Trypanosoma brucei, can gauge its environment by sensing nutrient availability. For example, procyclic form (PF) trypanosomes monitor changes in glucose levels to regulate surface molecule expression, which is important for survival in the tsetse fly vector. The molecular connection between glycolysis and surface molecule expression is unknown. Here we partially characterize T. brucei homologs of the β and γ subunits of the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), and determine their roles in regulating surface molecule expression. Using flow cytometry and mass spectrometry, we found that TbAMPKβ or TbAMPKγ-deficient parasites express both of the major surface molecules, EP- and GPEET-procyclin, with the latter being a form that is expressed when glucose is low such as in the tsetse fly. Last, we have found that the putative scaffold component of the complex, TbAMPKβ, fractionates with organellar components and colocalizes in part with a glycosomal marker as well as the flagellum of PF parasites.  相似文献   

16.
Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of African sleeping sickness, a devastating disease endemic to sub-Saharan Africa with few effective treatment options. The parasite is highly polarized, including a single flagellum that is nucleated at the posterior of the cell and adhered along the cell surface. These features are essential and must be transmitted to the daughter cells during division. Recently we identified the T. brucei homologue of polo-like kinase (TbPLK) as an essential morphogenic regulator. In the present work, we conduct proteomic screens to identify potential TbPLK binding partners and substrates to better understand the molecular mechanisms of kinase function. These screens identify a cohort of proteins, most of which are completely uncharacterized, which localize to key cytoskeletal organelles involved in establishing cell morphology, including the flagella connector, flagellum attachment zone, and bilobe structure. Depletion of these proteins causes substantial changes in cell division, including mispositioning of the kinetoplast, loss of flagellar connection, and prevention of cytokinesis. The proteins identified in these screens provide the foundation for establishing the molecular networks through which TbPLK directs cell morphogenesis in T. brucei.  相似文献   

17.
Null mutants of the Trypanosoma cruzi insect stage-specific glycoprotein GP72 were created by targeted gene replacement. Targeting plasmids were constructed in which the neomycin phosphotransferase and hygromycin phosphotransferase genes were flanked by GP72 sequences. These plasmids were sequentially transfected into T. cruzi epimastigotes by electroporation. Southern blot analyzes indicated that precise replacement of the two genes had occurred. No aberrant rearrangements occurred at the GP72 locus and no GP72 gene sequences had been translocated elsewhere in the genome. Western blots confirmed that GP72 is not expressed in these null mutants. The morphology of the mutants is dramatically different from wild-type. In both mutant and wild-type parasites, the flagellum emerges from the flagellar pocket. In the null mutant the normal attachment of the flagellum to the cell membrane of the parasite is lost.  相似文献   

18.
Autophagy in the protozoan parasite, Trypanosoma brucei, may be involved in differentiation between different life cycle forms and during growth in culture. We have generated multiple parasite cell lines stably expressing green fluorescent protein- or hemagglutinin-tagged forms of the autophagy marker proteins, TbAtg8.1 and TbAtg8.2, in T. brucei procyclic forms to establish a trypanosome system for quick and reliable determination of autophagy under different culture conditions using flow cytometry. We found that starvation-induced autophagy in T. brucei can be inhibited by addition of a single amino acid, histidine, to the incubation buffer. In addition, we show that autophagy is induced when parasites enter stationary growth phase in culture and that their capacity to undergo starvation-induced autophagy decreases with increasing cell density.  相似文献   

19.
Trypanosoma brucei is a protozoan parasite that is used as a model organism to study such biological phenomena as gene expression, protein trafficking, and cytoskeletal biogenesis. In T. brucei, endocytosis and exocytosis occur exclusively through a sequestered organelle called the flagellar pocket (FP), an invagination of the pellicular membrane. The pocket is the sole site for specific receptors thus maintaining them inaccessible to components of the innate immune system of the mammalian host. The FP is also responsible for the sorting of protective parasite glycoproteins targeted to, or recycling from, the pellicular membrane, and for the removal of host antibodies from the cell surface. Here, we describe the first characterisation of a flagellar pocket cytoskeletal protein, BILBO1. BILBO1 functions to form a cytoskeleton framework upon which the FP is made and which is also required and essential for FP biogenesis and cell survival. Remarkably, RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated ablation of BILBO1 in insect procyclic-form parasites prevents FP biogenesis and induces vesicle accumulation, Golgi swelling, the aberrant repositioning of the new flagellum, and cell death. Cultured bloodstream-form parasites are also nonviable when subjected to BILBO1 RNAi. These results provide the first molecular evidence for cytoskeletally mediated FP biogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Elucidating the mechanism of action of trypanocidal compounds is an important step in the development of more efficient drugs against Trypanosoma brucei. In a screening approach using an RNAi library in T. brucei bloodstream forms, we identified a member of the mitochondrial carrier family, TbMCP14, as a prime candidate mediating the action of a group of anti-parasitic choline analogs. Depletion of TbMCP14 by inducible RNAi in both bloodstream and procyclic forms increased resistance of parasites towards the compounds by 7-fold and 3-fold, respectively, compared to uninduced cells. In addition, down-regulation of TbMCP14 protected bloodstream form mitochondria from a drug-induced decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential. Conversely, over-expression of the carrier in procyclic forms increased parasite susceptibility more than 13-fold. Metabolomic analyses of parasites over-expressing TbMCP14 showed increased levels of the proline metabolite, pyrroline-5-carboxylate, suggesting a possible involvement of TbMCP14 in energy production. The generation of TbMCP14 knock-out parasites showed that the carrier is not essential for survival of T. brucei bloodstream forms, but reduced parasite proliferation under standard culture conditions. In contrast, depletion of TbMCP14 in procyclic forms resulted in growth arrest, followed by parasite death. The time point at which parasite proliferation stopped was dependent on the major energy source, i.e. glucose versus proline, in the culture medium. Together with our findings that proline-dependent ATP production in crude mitochondria from TbMCP14-depleted trypanosomes was reduced compared to control mitochondria, the study demonstrates that TbMCP14 is involved in energy production in T. brucei. Since TbMCP14 belongs to a trypanosomatid-specific clade of mitochondrial carrier family proteins showing very poor similarity to mitochondrial carriers of mammals, it may represent an interesting target for drug action or targeting.  相似文献   

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