Lourido Sebastian, Shuman Joel, Zhang Chao, Shokat Kevan M, Hui Raymond, Sibley L David
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, St Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
Nature. 2010 May 20;465(7296):359-62. doi: 10.1038/nature09022.
Calcium-regulated exocytosis is a ubiquitous process in eukaryotes, whereby secretory vesicles fuse with the plasma membrane and release their contents in response to an intracellular calcium surge. This process regulates various cellular functions such as plasma membrane repair in plants and animals, the discharge of defensive spikes in Paramecium, and the secretion of insulin from pancreatic cells, immune modulators from lymphocytes, and chemical transmitters from neurons. In animal cells, serine/threonine kinases including cAMP-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase C and calmodulin kinases have been implicated in calcium-signal transduction leading to regulated secretion. Although plants and protozoa also regulate secretion by means of intracellular calcium, the method by which these signals are relayed has not been explained. Here we show that the Toxoplasma gondii calcium-dependent protein kinase 1 (TgCDPK1) is an essential regulator of calcium-dependent exocytosis in this opportunistic human pathogen. Conditional suppression of TgCDPK1 revealed that it controls calcium-dependent secretion of specialized organelles called micronemes, resulting in a block of essential phenotypes including parasite motility, host-cell invasion, and egress. These phenotypes were recapitulated by using a chemical biology approach in which pyrazolopyrimidine-derived compounds specifically inhibited TgCDPK1 and disrupted the parasite's life cycle at stages dependent on microneme secretion. Inhibition was specific to TgCDPK1, because expression of a resistant mutant kinase reversed sensitivity to the inhibitor. TgCDPK1 is conserved among apicomplexans and belongs to a family of kinases shared with plants and ciliates, suggesting that related CDPKs may have a function in calcium-regulated secretion in other organisms. Because this kinase family is absent from mammalian hosts, it represents a validated target that may be exploitable for chemotherapy against T. gondii and related apicomplexans.
钙调节的胞吐作用是真核生物中普遍存在的过程,即分泌囊泡与质膜融合,并响应细胞内钙激增而释放其内容物。该过程调节各种细胞功能,如动植物中的质膜修复、草履虫中防御刺突的释放,以及胰腺细胞中胰岛素的分泌、淋巴细胞中免疫调节剂的分泌和神经元中化学递质的分泌。在动物细胞中,包括cAMP依赖性蛋白激酶、蛋白激酶C和钙调蛋白激酶在内的丝氨酸/苏氨酸激酶参与了导致调节性分泌的钙信号转导。虽然植物和原生动物也通过细胞内钙来调节分泌,但这些信号的传递方式尚未得到解释。在这里,我们表明,弓形虫钙依赖性蛋白激酶1(TgCDPK1)是这种机会性人类病原体中钙依赖性胞吐作用的重要调节因子。对TgCDPK1的条件性抑制表明,它控制着称为微线体的特殊细胞器的钙依赖性分泌,导致包括寄生虫运动性、宿主细胞入侵和逸出在内的重要表型受阻。通过化学生物学方法概括了这些表型,其中吡唑并嘧啶衍生化合物特异性抑制TgCDPK1,并在依赖微线体分泌的阶段破坏寄生虫的生命周期。抑制作用对TgCDPK1具有特异性,因为抗性突变激酶的表达逆转了对抑制剂的敏感性。TgCDPK1在顶复门中保守,属于与植物和纤毛虫共有的激酶家族,这表明相关的钙依赖性蛋白激酶可能在其他生物体的钙调节分泌中发挥作用。由于哺乳动物宿主中不存在这种激酶家族,它代表了一个经过验证的靶点,可以用于开发针对弓形虫和相关顶复门寄生虫的化疗药物。