Plasma membrane-located purine nucleotide transport proteins are key components for host exploitation by microsporidian intracellular parasites
Heinz, Eva and Hacker, Christian and Dean, Paul and Mifsud, John and Goldberg, Alina V. and Williams, Tom A. and Nakjang, Sirintra and Gregory, Alison and Hirt, Robert P. and Lucocq, John M. and Kunji, Edmund R.S. and Embley, T. Martin (2014) Plasma membrane-located purine nucleotide transport proteins are key components for host exploitation by microsporidian intracellular parasites. PLOS Pathogens, 10 (12). e1004547. ISSN 1553-7366 (https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004547)
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Abstract
Microsporidia are obligate intracellular parasites of most animal groups including humans, but despite their significant economic and medical importance there are major gaps in our understanding of how they exploit infected host cells. We have investigated the evolution, cellular locations and substrate specificities of a family of nucleotide transport (NTT) proteins from Trachipleistophora hominis, a microsporidian isolated from an HIV/AIDS patient. Transport proteins are critical to microsporidian success because they compensate for the dramatic loss of metabolic pathways that is a hallmark of the group. Our data demonstrate that the use of plasma membrane-located nucleotide transport proteins (NTT) is a key strategy adopted by microsporidians to exploit host cells. Acquisition of an ancestral transporter gene at the base of the microsporidian radiation was followed by lineage-specific events of gene duplication, which in the case of T. hominis has generated four paralogous NTT transporters. All four T. hominis NTT proteins are located predominantly to the plasma membrane of replicating intracellular cells where they can mediate transport at the host-parasite interface. In contrast to published data for Encephalitozoon cuniculi, we found no evidence for the location for any of the T. hominis NTT transporters to its minimal mitochondria (mitosomes), consistent with lineage-specific differences in transporter and mitosome evolution. All of the T. hominis NTTs transported radiolabelled purine nucleotides (ATP, ADP, GTP and GDP) when expressed in Escherichia coli, but did not transport radiolabelled pyrimidine nucleotides. Genome analysis suggests that imported purine nucleotides could be used by T. hominis to make all of the critical purine-based building-blocks for DNA and RNA biosynthesis during parasite intracellular replication, as well as providing essential energy for parasite cellular metabolism and protein synthesis.
ORCID iDs
Heinz, Eva ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4413-3756, Hacker, Christian, Dean, Paul, Mifsud, John, Goldberg, Alina V., Williams, Tom A., Nakjang, Sirintra, Gregory, Alison, Hirt, Robert P., Lucocq, John M., Kunji, Edmund R.S. and Embley, T. Martin;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 90666 Dates: DateEvent4 December 2014Published31 October 2014AcceptedSubjects: Science > Microbiology Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 23 Sep 2024 15:23 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 14:27 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/90666