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A Novel Protein Kinase Localized to Lipid Droplets Is Required for Droplet Biogenesis in Trypanosomes
Authors:John A. Flaspohler  Bryan C. Jensen  Tracy Saveria  Charles T. Kifer  Marilyn Parsons
Affiliation:1.Seattle Biomedical Research Institute, 307 Westlake Ave. N., Seattle, Washington 98109;2.Department of Biology, Concordia College, 901 8th St. South, Moorhead, Minnesota 56562;3.Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
Abstract:Ubiquitous among eukaryotes, lipid droplets are organelles that function to coordinate intracellular lipid homeostasis. Their morphology and abundance is affected by numerous genes, many of which are involved in lipid metabolism. In this report we identify a Trypanosoma brucei protein kinase, LDK, and demonstrate its localization to the periphery of lipid droplets. Association with lipid droplets was abrogated when the hydrophobic domain of LDK was deleted, supporting a model in which the hydrophobic domain is associated with or inserted into the membrane monolayer of the organelle. RNA interference knockdown of LDK modestly affected the growth of mammalian bloodstream-stage parasites but did not affect the growth of insect (procyclic)-stage parasites. However, the abundance of lipid droplets dramatically decreased in both cases. This loss was dominant over treatment with myriocin or growth in delipidated serum, both of which induce lipid body biogenesis. Growth in delipidated serum also increased LDK autophosphorylation activity. Thus, LDK is required for the biogenesis or maintenance of lipid droplets and is one of the few protein kinases specifically and predominantly associated with an intracellular organelle.Trypanosoma brucei is a single-celled eukaryotic pathogen responsible for human African trypanosomiasis (also known as African sleeping sickness) and nagana in domestic animals. More than 50,000 cases of human disease occur yearly, with over 70 million people at risk. No vaccine exists, and chemotherapy is difficult to administer and prone to pathogen resistance. As T. brucei transits between the mammalian bloodstream and the tsetse fly vector during its life cycle, the organism encounters and adapts to profoundly different environmental conditions. The parasite undergoes dramatic changes in both energy (7, 51) and lipid biosynthesis and metabolism (39, 47, 49) as it shifts between these environments.Protein kinases function in numerous regulatory aspects of the cell, including control of the cell cycle and morphology, responses to stress, and transmission of signals from the extracellular environment or between compartments of the cell. As is the case in other eukaryotes, protein kinases, particularly those associated with membranes, are expected to play pivotal roles in the cell''s ability to sense and appropriately respond to its environment. Trypanosoma brucei possesses over 170 protein kinases (16, 44). Most of these can be assigned to the standard groups of protein kinases based on sequence similarity within the kinase domain. However, sequence similarities with kinases from more well-studied organisms are rarely strong enough to allow one-to-one orthologous relationships to be determined (44), and even those which appear orthologous by sequence have sometimes shown functional divergence (46). Hence, an understanding of the roles of specific protein kinases of trypanosomatids requires an individualized assessment. The initial genome analysis of the trypanosomatids (16) showed a lack of receptor tyrosine kinases, but nine T. brucei predicted serine/threonine kinases were annotated as possessing transmembrane domains. One of these was recently shown to be strategically located at a key interface between the host and parasite: the flagellar pocket (38). This eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α) family kinase was postulated to play a sensory role in monitoring protein transport.Only a very small number of protein kinases of various organisms have been observed to localize to the membranes of intracellular organelles, most of them to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (14, 27, 50). Lipid droplets (also known as lipid bodies, adiposomes, or oil bodies in plants) are thought to arise from the ER, although the routes of protein localization to them are not well understood. They are increasingly recognized as legitimate organelles due to their dynamic roles in energy metabolism (40), lipid trafficking (41), and protection against toxic effects of nonesterified lipids and sterols (18). Studies also suggest that they function as potential protein storage depots (12) and in antigen presentation (10). Although recent efforts to expand the lipid droplet proteome have resulted in a vastly increased and in many cases surprising catalogue of potentially associated proteins (3, 5, 11, 12, 23, 37), relatively little is known as to how these structures form and are regulated within the cell.We examine here a novel T. brucei protein kinase with a predicted transmembrane domain. Surprisingly, this protein is localized intracellularly in association with lipid droplets. RNAi-mediated knockdown of this newly identified kinase, dubbed LDK (for lipid droplet kinase), reveals a role in the formation or maintenance of lipid droplets in both mammalian bloodstream-form (BF) and insect procyclic-form (PF) stages of the parasite life cycle.
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