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Role of AP-1 in Developmentally Regulated Lysosomal Trafficking in Trypanosoma brucei
Authors:Ngii N Tazeh  Jason S Silverman  Kevin J Schwartz  Elitza S Sevova  Shaheen S Sutterwala  James D Bangs
Institution:Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, 1550 Linden Drive, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract:African trypanosomes are the causative agents of human trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness). The pathogenic stage of the parasite has unique adaptations to life in the bloodstream of the mammalian host, including upregulation of endocytic and lysosomal activities. We investigated stage-specific requirements for cytoplasmic adaptor/clathrin machinery in post-Golgi apparatus biosynthetic sorting to the lysosome using RNA interference silencing of the Tbμ1 subunit of adaptor complex 1 (AP-1), in conjunction with immunolocalization, kinetic analyses of reporter transport, and quantitative endocytosis assays. Tbμ1 silencing was lethal in both stages, indicating a critical function(s) for the AP-1 machinery. Transport of soluble and membrane-bound secretory cargoes was Tbμ1 independent in both stages. In procyclic parasites, trafficking of the lysosomal membrane protein, p67, was disrupted, leading to cell surface mislocalization. The lysosomal protease trypanopain was also secreted, suggesting a transmembrane-sorting receptor for this soluble hydrolase. In bloodstream trypanosomes, both p67 and trypanopain trafficking were unaffected by Tbμ1 silencing, suggesting that AP-1 is not necessary for biosynthetic lysosomal trafficking. Endocytosis in bloodstream cells was also unaffected, indicating that AP-1 does not function at the flagellar pocket. These results indicate that post-Golgi apparatus sorting to the lysosome is critically dependent on the AP-1/clathrin machinery in procyclic trypanosomes but that this machinery is not necessary in bloodstream parasites. We propose a simple model for stage-specific default secretory trafficking in trypanosomes that is consistent with the behavior of other soluble and glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored cargos and which is influenced by upregulation of endocytosis in bloodstream parasites as an adaptation to life in the mammalian bloodstream.African trypanosomes (Trypanosoma brucei subspecies), the agents of African sleeping sickness, are alone among the kinetoplastid parasites (including Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania spp.) in having a pathogenic bloodstream stage that exists and replicates extracellularly in the mammalian host. This places unique constraints on the parasite in terms of dealing with host immune responses and on acquisition of essential nutrients. The parasite has evolved many strategies to deal with these constraints, the best known of which is the process of antigenic variation (9). Another is the lysosome, which impacts the host-pathogen balance in multiple ways. Trypanosomes have a single terminal lysosome that is the final repository of endocytic cargo acquired from the host serum for nutritional purposes (30), as well as for potentially lytic immune complexes removed from the cell surface (4, 8). Both endocytosis and lysosomal hydrolytic activities are differentially regulated through the trypanosome life cycle (11, 30), and there are stage-specific differences in the biosynthetic trafficking of essential lysosomal components (discussed below). The release of lysosomal proteases is a factor in the signature event of human infection, penetration of the central nervous system (36). Finally, lysosomal physiology is critical to the activity of an innate human serum resistance trait, trypanolytic factor, which limits the host range of Trypanosoma species (38).Clearly, given its multiple roles in pathogenesis, biogenesis of the lysosome is critical to the success of trypanosomes as human parasites. As in all eukaryotes, lysosomal biogenesis is a balance between the proper sorting of newly synthesized membranes and proteins and recycling of established membranes and proteins internalized from the cell surface. In each case, protein sorting involves recognition of specific signals in cargo molecules by cellular machinery for inclusion in nascent transport vesicles destined for downstream delivery. Unique sets of cytoplasmic coat complexes at discrete intracellular locations serve the dual purpose of simultaneously mediating vesicle formation and selective cargo loading. The best characterized of these machineries is the clathrin/adaptin system for formation of coated vesicles at the Golgi apparatus and the plasma membrane (10, 41). Adaptor complexes (APs) are cytosolic heterotetramers that interact with specific signals in the cytoplasmic domains of membrane cargo proteins, such as dileucine motifs (E/D]XXXLL/I]) and tyrosine motifs (YXXØ, where Ø is a bulky hydrophobic residue). The prototypic AP complexes are AP-1 and AP-2, which function at the trans-Golgi network and plasma membrane, respectively. Both are composed of two large subunits (γ/β1 in AP-1; α/β2 in AP-2) and two smaller subunits (σ1/μ1 in AP-1; σ2/μ2 in AP-2). YXXØ motifs interact with μ adaptins, and dileucine motifs interact with combinations of adaptin subunits in both AP-1 and AP-2 (26, 40, 42). It is the large subunits, particularly β adaptin, that mediate clathrin recruitment (19, 44). Other APs, AP-3 and AP-4, with discrete subunit compositions, also exist. AP-3 functions in trafficking to lysosome-related organelles, such as melanosomes, and AP-4 may be involved in basolateral trafficking in polarized epithelial cells (10). The genome of the African trypanosome, T. brucei, encodes a complete complement of orthologous subunits for AP-1, AP-3, and AP-4 but has no genes for AP-2, the major adaptor complex mediating endocytosis in vertebrate cells (16). This is likely due to evolutionary loss, since the closely related T. cruzi has orthologues of all four APs.Two major lysosomal cargo proteins have been studied in T. brucei, the LAMP (lysosome-associated membrane protein)-like protein p67 and the cathepsin L orthologue trypanopain. p67 is a type I membrane protein with a large glycosylated lumenal domain and a short cytoplasmic domain (1, 27). In procyclic insect stage (PCF) trypanosomes, the cytoplasmic domain is both necessary and sufficient for lysosomal targeting of a heterologous reporter, and its deletion results in mistargeting of p67 to the cell surface (1). The cytoplasmic domain contains two canonical dileucine motifs, mutation of which also results in delivery to the cell surface (47). These findings strongly indicate the existence of cognate cytoplasmic machinery for lysosomal delivery of p67 in PCF trypanosomes. Strikingly, however, the cytoplasmic domain, and its motifs, are totally dispensable for lysosomal targeting in bloodstream stage (BSF) trypanosomes (1). Deletion of the cytoplasmic domain results in minor mislocalization to the cell surface, but p67 is still overwhelmingly delivered to the lysosome. Ongoing lysosomal targeting cannot easily be attributed to misfolding of the lumenal domain, as suggested by others (3), since the normal transport-associated patterns of p67 glycosylation and cleavage prevail in these deletion constructs.Less is known about targeting of soluble trypanopain. In mammalian cells, soluble hydrolases are targeted to the lysosome by the addition of mannose-6-phosphate (M6P) moieties in the Golgi apparatus, which serve as ligands for recognition and lysosomal targeting by downstream M6P receptors (28). Soluble hydrolases can also be sorted by receptors that recognize polypeptide motifs, such as sortilins in mammalian cells (12) and Vps10 in yeast (13, 32). These receptors have lumenal cargo recognition domains and cytoplasmic domains containing signals for late endosomal targeting and recycling. M6P-modified N-linked glycans are not found in trypanosomes, and genes encoding the necessary enzymatic activities are absent from the genome (16), ruling out this possibility for trypanopain sorting. However, the T. cruzi orthologue, cruzipain, has been shown to rely on peptide motifs in the N-terminal prodomain for targeting (24), raising the possibility of a sortilin/Vps10p-like sorting receptor. Although there are no obvious orthologues of these proteins in the T. brucei genome, overexpression of trypanopain in PCF trypanosomes leads to secretion, an observation that is consistent with saturation of a specific sorting receptor (S. S. Sutterwala and J. D. Bangs, unpublished observations).Having previously studied the innate signals involved in p67 targeting (1, 47), we now turned our attention to the cognate machinery for post-Golgi apparatus sorting. Specifically, we investigate the role of trypanosomal AP-1 in stage-specific biosynthetic trafficking to the lysosome using RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated silencing of the Tbμ1 (geneDB no. Tb927.7.3180 www.genedb.org]) subunit as our primary strategy. Our results demonstrate that AP-1 and clathrin are critical for lysosomal targeting of p67 and trypanopain in PCF trypanosomes but that they are essentially dispensable in BSF parasites. These data, in conjunction with the behavior of p67-targeting mutants (1) and other trypanosomal secretory reporters, lead us to propose a simple model for stage-specific default trafficking in African trypanosomes. Although in some respects our results are similar to those of a recent publication using RNAi silencing of the Tbγ1 subunit of AP-1 (3), they differ in key aspects, leading us to significantly different conclusions.
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