Characterization and functional analysis of Toxoplasma Golgi-associated proteins identified by proximity labeling.

IF 5.1 1区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
mBio Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Epub Date: 2024-09-30 DOI:10.1128/mbio.02380-24
Rebecca R Pasquarelli, Justin J Quan, Emily S Cheng, Vivian Yang, Timmie A Britton, Jihui Sha, James A Wohlschlegel, Peter J Bradley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Toxoplasma gondii possesses a highly polarized secretory pathway that contains both broadly conserved eukaryotic organelles and unique apicomplexan organelles, which play essential roles in the parasite's lytic cycle. As in other eukaryotes, the T. gondii Golgi apparatus sorts and modifies proteins prior to their distribution to downstream organelles. Many of the typical trafficking factors found involved in these processes are missing from apicomplexan genomes, suggesting that these parasites have evolved unique proteins to fill these roles. Here, we identify a Golgi-localizing protein (ULP1), which is structurally similar to the eukaryotic trafficking factor p115/Uso1. We demonstrate that depletion of ULP1 leads to a dramatic reduction in parasite fitness that is the result of defects in microneme secretion, invasion, replication, and egress. Using ULP1 as bait for TurboID proximity labeling and immunoprecipitation, we identify 11 more Golgi-associated proteins and demonstrate that ULP1 interacts with the T. gondii-conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex. These proteins include both conserved trafficking factors and parasite-specific proteins. Using a conditional knockdown approach, we assess the effect of each of these 11 proteins on parasite fitness. Together, this work reveals a diverse set of T. gondii Golgi-associated proteins that play distinct roles in the secretory pathway. As several of these proteins are absent outside of the Apicomplexa, they represent potential targets for the development of novel therapeutics against these parasites.

Importance: Apicomplexan parasites such as Toxoplasma gondii infect a large percentage of the world's population and cause substantial human disease. These widespread pathogens use specialized secretory organelles to infect their host cells, modulate host cell functions, and cause disease. While the functions of the secretory organelles are now better understood, the Golgi apparatus of the parasite remains largely unexplored, particularly regarding parasite-specific innovations that may help direct traffic intracellularly. In this work, we characterize ULP1, a protein that is unique to parasites but shares structural similarity to the eukaryotic trafficking factor p115/Uso1. We show that ULP1 plays an important role in parasite fitness and demonstrate that it interacts with the conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex. We then use ULP1 proximity labeling to identify 11 additional Golgi-associated proteins, which we functionally analyze via conditional knockdown. This work expands our knowledge of the Toxoplasma Golgi apparatus and identifies potential targets for therapeutic intervention.

通过近距离标记鉴定的弓形虫高尔基相关蛋白的特征和功能分析。
弓形虫拥有一条高度极化的分泌途径,其中既包含广泛保守的真核细胞器,也包含独特的 apicomplexan 细胞器,它们在寄生虫的裂解循环中发挥着重要作用。与其他真核生物一样,淋病双球菌高尔基体在将蛋白质分配到下游细胞器之前也会对其进行分类和修饰。这些过程中发现的许多典型的转运因子在 apicomplexan 基因组中并不存在,这表明这些寄生虫已经进化出了独特的蛋白质来扮演这些角色。在这里,我们发现了一种高尔基定位蛋白(ULP1),它在结构上类似于真核生物的转运因子 p115/Uso1。我们证明,耗尽 ULP1 会导致寄生虫的适应性急剧下降,而这是微粒分泌、入侵、复制和排出缺陷的结果。利用 ULP1 作为 TurboID 近距离标记和免疫沉淀的诱饵,我们又鉴定出 11 种高尔基相关蛋白,并证明 ULP1 与淋球菌保守寡聚高尔基复合体(COG)相互作用。这些蛋白包括保守的贩运因子和寄生虫特异性蛋白。利用条件性基因敲除方法,我们评估了这 11 种蛋白质对寄生虫适应性的影响。总之,这项研究揭示了在分泌途径中发挥不同作用的各种淋球菌高尔基相关蛋白。由于这些蛋白中有几种在表皮复合寄生虫之外并不存在,因此它们是开发针对这些寄生虫的新型疗法的潜在靶标:弓形虫等表皮复合寄生虫感染了世界上很大一部分人口,并导致大量人类疾病。这些广泛传播的病原体利用专门的分泌细胞器感染宿主细胞、调节宿主细胞功能并导致疾病。虽然现在人们对分泌细胞器的功能有了更深入的了解,但寄生虫的高尔基体在很大程度上仍未被探索,尤其是关于寄生虫特异性创新的研究,这些创新可能有助于引导细胞内的交通。在这项研究中,我们对 ULP1 进行了表征,这是一种寄生虫特有的蛋白质,但在结构上与真核生物运输因子 p115/Uso1 相似。我们发现 ULP1 在寄生虫的适应性方面发挥着重要作用,并证明它能与保守的寡聚高尔基复合体(COG)相互作用。然后,我们利用 ULP1 的近似标记鉴定了另外 11 个高尔基相关蛋白,并通过条件性敲除对其进行了功能分析。这项工作拓展了我们对弓形虫高尔基体的认识,并确定了潜在的治疗干预目标。
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来源期刊
mBio
mBio MICROBIOLOGY-
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
762
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: mBio® is ASM''s first broad-scope, online-only, open access journal. mBio offers streamlined review and publication of the best research in microbiology and allied fields.
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