Mesén-Ramírez Paolo, Reinsch Ferdinand, Blancke Soares Alexandra, Bergmann Bärbel, Ullrich Ann-Katrin, Tenzer Stefan, Spielmann Tobias
Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine, Parasitology section, Hamburg, Germany.
Institute for Immunology, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Mainz, Germany.
PLoS Pathog. 2016 May 11;12(5):e1005618. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005618. eCollection 2016 May.
Protein export is central for the survival and virulence of intracellular P. falciparum blood stage parasites. To reach the host cell, exported proteins cross the parasite plasma membrane (PPM) and the parasite-enclosing parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM), a process that requires unfolding, suggestive of protein translocation. Components of a proposed translocon at the PVM termed PTEX are essential in this phase of export but translocation activity has not been shown for the complex and questions have been raised about its proposed membrane pore component EXP2 for which no functional data is available in P. falciparum. It is also unclear how PTEX mediates trafficking of both, soluble as well as transmembrane proteins. Taking advantage of conditionally foldable domains, we here dissected the translocation events in the parasite periphery, showing that two successive translocation steps are needed for the export of transmembrane proteins, one at the PPM and one at the PVM. Our data provide evidence that, depending on the length of the C-terminus of the exported substrate, these steps occur by transient interaction of the PPM and PVM translocon, similar to the situation for protein transport across the mitochondrial membranes. Remarkably, we obtained constructs of exported proteins that remained arrested in the process of being translocated across the PVM. This clogged the translocation pore, prevented the export of all types of exported proteins and, as a result, inhibited parasite growth. The substrates stuck in translocation were found in a complex with the proposed PTEX membrane pore component EXP2, suggesting a role of this protein in translocation. These data for the first time provide evidence for EXP2 to be part of a translocating entity, suggesting that PTEX has translocation activity and provide a mechanistic framework for the transport of soluble as well as transmembrane proteins from the parasite boundary into the host cell.
蛋白质输出对于细胞内恶性疟原虫血液阶段寄生虫的存活和毒力至关重要。为了到达宿主细胞,输出的蛋白质会穿过寄生虫质膜(PPM)和包裹寄生虫的液泡膜(PVM),这一过程需要蛋白质解折叠,提示存在蛋白质转运。在PVM处一个被称为PTEX的假定转运体复合物的组分在这一输出阶段至关重要,但尚未证明该复合物具有转运活性,并且对于其假定的膜孔组分EXP2也存在疑问,在恶性疟原虫中尚无关于该组分的功能数据。目前也不清楚PTEX如何介导可溶性蛋白和跨膜蛋白的转运。利用条件性可折叠结构域,我们在此剖析了寄生虫外周的转运事件,表明跨膜蛋白的输出需要两个连续的转运步骤,一个在PPM处,一个在PVM处。我们的数据提供了证据,表明根据输出底物C末端的长度,这些步骤是通过PPM和PVM转运体的瞬时相互作用发生的,类似于蛋白质穿过线粒体膜的情况。值得注意的是,我们获得了在跨PVM转运过程中停滞的输出蛋白构建体。这堵塞了转运孔,阻止了所有类型输出蛋白的输出,结果抑制了寄生虫的生长。发现滞留在转运过程中的底物与假定的PTEX膜孔组分EXP2形成复合物,表明该蛋白在转运中发挥作用。这些数据首次为EXP2作为转运实体的一部分提供了证据,表明PTEX具有转运活性,并为可溶性蛋白和跨膜蛋白从寄生虫边界转运到宿主细胞提供了一个机制框架。