Fellows Justin D, Cipriano Michael J, Agrawal Swati, Striepen Boris
Department of Cellular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
mBio. 2017 Jun 27;8(3):e00950-17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00950-17.
Apicomplexan parasites cause a variety of important infectious diseases, including malaria, toxoplasma encephalitis, and severe diarrhea due to Most apicomplexans depend on an organelle called the apicoplast which is derived from a red algal endosymbiont. The apicoplast is essential for the parasite as the compartment of fatty acid, heme, and isoprenoid biosynthesis. The majority of the approximate 500 apicoplast proteins are nucleus encoded and have to be imported across the four membranes that surround the apicoplast. Import across the second outermost membrane of the apicoplast, the periplastid membrane, depends on an apicoplast-specific endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation (ERAD) complex and on enzymes of the associated ubiquitination cascade. However, identification of an apicoplast ubiquitin associated with this machinery has long been elusive. Here we identify a plastid ubiquitin-like protein (PUBL), an apicoplast protein that is derived from a ubiquitin ancestor but that has significantly changed in its primary sequence. PUBL is distinct from known ubiquitin-like proteins, and phylogenomic analyses suggest a clade specific to apicomplexans. We demonstrate that PUBL and the AAA ATPase CDC48 both act to translocate apicoplast proteins across the periplastid membrane during protein import. Conditional null mutants and genetic complementation show that both proteins are critical for this process and for parasite survival. PUBL residues homologous to those that are required for ubiquitin conjugation onto target proteins are essential for this function, while those required for polyubiquitination and preprotein processing are dispensable. Our experiments provide a mechanistic understanding of the molecular machinery that drives protein import across the membranes of the apicoplast. Apicomplexan parasites are responsible for important human diseases. There are no effective vaccines for use in humans, and drug treatment faces multiple challenges, including emerging resistance, lack of efficacy across the lifecycle, and adverse drug effects. The apicoplast is a promising target for novel treatments: this chloroplast-like organelle is derived from an algal symbiont, is absent from the host, and is essential for parasite growth and pathogenesis. We use as a model to study the apicoplast due to its strong genetic tools and established functional assays. We identify a plastid ubiquitin-like protein (PUBL) which is a novel ubiquitin-like protein and demonstrate its importance and that of the motor protein CDC48 for apicoplast protein import. These findings broaden our understanding of the evolution and mechanistic workings of a unique parasite organelle and may lead to new opportunities for treatments against important human pathogens.
顶复门寄生虫会引发多种重要的传染病,包括疟疾、弓形虫脑炎以及由[具体病原体名称缺失]导致的严重腹泻。大多数顶复门寄生虫依赖一种名为质体的细胞器,它源自红藻内共生体。质体对于寄生虫而言至关重要,它是脂肪酸、血红素和类异戊二烯生物合成的场所。大约500种质体蛋白中的大多数由细胞核编码,必须穿过围绕质体的四层膜才能导入。穿过质体的第二外层膜,即周质体膜的导入过程,依赖于一种质体特异性的内质网相关蛋白降解(ERAD)复合体以及相关泛素化级联反应的酶。然而,长期以来一直难以鉴定与这一机制相关的质体泛素。在此,我们鉴定出一种质体类泛素蛋白(PUBL),它是一种源自泛素祖先但一级序列已发生显著变化的质体蛋白。PUBL与已知的类泛素蛋白不同,系统基因组分析表明它属于顶复门特有的一个进化枝。我们证明,在蛋白质导入过程中,PUBL和AAA型ATP酶CDC48都作用于将质体蛋白转运穿过周质体膜。条件性缺失突变体和基因互补实验表明,这两种蛋白对于这一过程以及寄生虫的存活都至关重要。与泛素结合到靶蛋白上所需残基同源的PUBL残基对于这一功能至关重要,而多聚泛素化和前体蛋白加工所需的残基则是可有可无的。我们的实验为驱动蛋白质穿过质体膜进行导入的分子机制提供了机械性的理解。顶复门寄生虫会引发重要的人类疾病。目前尚无有效的人类疫苗,药物治疗面临多重挑战,包括新出现的耐药性、在整个生命周期内缺乏疗效以及药物不良反应。质体是新型治疗方法的一个有前景的靶点:这种类似叶绿体的细胞器源自藻类共生体,在宿主中不存在,对于寄生虫的生长和致病机制至关重要。由于其强大的遗传工具和已建立的功能检测方法,我们使用[具体模型名称缺失]作为研究质体的模型。我们鉴定出一种质体类泛素蛋白(PUBL),它是一种新型类泛素蛋白,并证明了它以及动力蛋白CDC48对于质体蛋白导入的重要性。这些发现拓宽了我们对一种独特寄生虫细胞器的进化和机制运作的理解,并可能为针对重要人类病原体的治疗带来新机遇。