A gene encoding Trypanosoma brucei UDP-N-acetylglucosamine pyrophosphorylase was identified, and the recombinant protein was shown to have enzymatic activity. The parasite enzyme is unusual in having a strict substrate specificity for N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphate and in being located inside a peroxisome-like microbody, the glycosome. A bloodstream form T. brucei conditional null mutant was constructed and shown to be unable to sustain growth in vitro or in vivo under nonpermissive conditions, demonstrating that there are no alternative metabolic or nutritional routes to UDP-N-acetylglucosamine and providing a genetic validation for the enzyme as a potential drug target. The conditional null mutant was also used to investigate the effects of N-acetylglucosamine starvation in the parasite. After 48 h under nonpermissive conditions, about 24 h before cell lysis, the status of parasite glycoprotein glycosylation was assessed. Under these conditions, UDP-N-acetylglucosamine levels were less than 5% of wild type. Lectin blotting and fluorescence microscopy with tomato lectin revealed that poly-N-acetyllactosamine structures were greatly reduced in the parasite. The principal parasite surface coat component, the variant surface glycoprotein, was also analyzed. Endoglycosidase digestions and mass spectrometry showed that, under UDP-N-acetylglucosamine starvation, the variant surface glycoprotein was specifically underglycosylated at its C-terminal Asn-428 N-glycosylation site. The significance of this finding, with respect to the hierarchy of site-specific N-glycosylation in T. brucei, is discussed.
A gene encoding Trypanosoma bruceiUDP-N-acetylglucosamine pyrophosphorylase was identified, and the recombinant protein was shown to have enzymatic activity. The parasite enzyme is unusual in having a strict substrate specificity for N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphate and in being located inside a peroxisome-like microbody, the glycosome. A bloodstream form T. brucei conditional null mutant was constructed and shown to be unable to sustain growth in vitro or in vivo under nonpermissive conditions, demonstrating that there are no alternative metabolic or nutritional routes to UDP-N-acetylglucosamine and providing a genetic validation for the enzyme as a potential drug target. The conditional null mutant was also used to investigate the effects of N-acetylglucosamine starvation in the parasite. After 48 h under nonpermissive conditions, about 24 h before cell lysis, the status of parasite glycoprotein glycosylation was assessed. Under these conditions, UDP-N-acetylglucosamine levels were less than 5% of wild type. Lectin blotting and fluorescence microscopy with tomatolectin revealed that poly-N-acetyllactosamine structures were greatly reduced in the parasite. The principal parasite surface coat component, the variant surface glycoprotein, was also analyzed. Endoglycosidase digestions and mass spectrometry showed that, under UDP-N-acetylglucosamine starvation, the variant surface glycoprotein was specifically underglycosylated at its C-terminal Asn-428N-glycosylation site. The significance of this finding, with respect to the hierarchy of site-specific N-glycosylation in T. brucei, is discussed.
Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of African sleeping
sickness in humans and nagana in cattle and is transmitted between mammalian
hosts by the bite of the tsetse fly (Glossina spp.). T.
brucei transmission occurs when the bloodstream form of the parasite is
ingested by a tsetse fly during feeding, the parasite then differentiates into
the procyclic form in order to colonize the tsetse fly midgut. The parasite
undergoes further differentiation and migration to the salivary gland of the
fly in order to infect a new mammalian host upon a subsequent bloodmeal.
T. brucei and the related trypanosomatid parasites Trypanosoma
cruzi and Leishmania, express an interesting array of
glycoconjugates, some of which are essential to parasite survival and
infectivity (reviewed in Refs.
1-4).
This has led to the investigation of potential therapeutic targets in parasite
glycoconjugate biosynthesis, such as enzymes of glycosylphosphatidylinositol
(GPI)3 biosynthesis
(5-8)
and enzymes of sugar nucleotide biosynthesis. With respect to the latter,
GDP-Man biosynthesis has been shown to be essential for the infectivity of
Leishmania mexicana
(9-13),
and UDP-glucose 4′-epimerase, the only source of UDP-Gal in T.
brucei, has been shown to be essential for both bloodstream form and
procyclic form T. brucei
(14-16)
and is likely to be essential for epimastigote form T. cruzi
(17). Recently, the synthesis
of GDP-fucose (GDP-Fuc) has been show to be essential for flagellar adhesion
and cell growth in T. brucei
(18), and measurement of sugar
nucleotide levels in trypanosomatids has indicated that the intracellular
pools of these metabolites are highly dynamic
(19).Sugar nucleotides are activated forms of sugars that are used as the
ultimate source of sugar for the majority of glycosylation reactions. Sugar
nucleotides are formed in two main ways: by a salvage pathway, involving
activation of the sugar using a kinase and a pyrophosphorylase, or by a de
novo pathway involving the bioconversion of an existing sugar/sugar
nucleotide. In most cases, sugar nucleotides are synthesized in the cytoplasm
and used there and/or transported through specific transporters into the lumen
of the Golgi apparatus and/or endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where they are used
by glycosyltransferases as donor substrates in glycosylation reactions
(20,
21).The sugar nucleotideUDP-GlcNAc is predicted to be an important metabolite
in the trypanosomatid parasites, since GlcNAc is present in glycoprotein
N-linked glycans in all species and in O-linked glycans in
T. cruzi (22,
23), and GlcN, derived from
GlcNAc by de-N-acetylation
(24), is present in all
species in protein-linked and free GPI structures. In T. brucei,
GlcNAc is also found in N-acetyllactosamine (LacNAc) repeats of
Galβ1-4GlcNAc. These LacNAc structures are found in conventional complex
N-linked glycans (25)
and as part of giant poly-LacNAc-containing N-linked glycans
throughout the flagellar pocket and endosomal/lysosomal system of the
bloodstream form (26,
27) and as side chains of the
procyclin GPI anchor and free GPIs in the procyclic form of the organism
(15,
28,
29). The ability to
biosynthetically radiolabel T. bruceiglycoproteins with
[3H]GlcN (30,
31) shows that a salvage
pathway exists, presumably via the action of hexokinase (GlcN → GlcN
6-phosphate). However, most likely, the de novo pathway from glucose
is the most important in vivo, since free GlcN is not an abundant
sugar in either mammals or insects, and its N-acetyl derivative
(GlcNAc) is not taken up by T. brucei
(32).In this work, we demonstrate that the putative T. brucei
uridine-acetylglucosamine pyrophosphorylase gene (TbUAP) encodes a
functional enzyme (EC 2.7.7.23) and, by making a bloodstream form T.
brucei TbUAP conditional null mutant, demonstrate that TbUAP is essential
in vitro and in vivo. We also characterize the effects of
UDP-GlcNAc starvation on parasite protein glycosylation and uncover a
hierarchy in protein N-glycosylation in T. brucei.
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Parasite Culture—T. brucei bloodstream form
parasites strain 427, variant MITat1.2 (also known as variant 221), that
express T7 polymerase and tetracycline repressor protein under G418 selection
were cultured in HMI-9 medium
(33) up to a density of ∼2
× 106 cells/ml at 37 °C with 5% CO2.Cloning and Sequencing of TbUAP—The TbUAP open
reading frame identified in the T. brucei genome data base was
amplified by PCR from genomic DNA with Pfu polymerase using forward and
reverse primers containing BamHI sites (underlined) of
5′-cgcggatccaatgagtgacagggacgtgtg-3′ and
5′-cgcggatccttacatgttcgatgattcgg-3′, respectively. The
products of six separate PCRs were cloned into pCR-BluntII-Topo®, and a
representative clone from each PCR was sequenced. The primer
5′-cgcagcggttcttcgaggagaattcctac-3′ was also used to obtain
complete sequence coverage of the ORF.Reverse Transcription-PCR—RNA was extracted using the RNeasy
extraction kits with on-column DNase digestion (RNase-free DNase; Qiagen). RNA
samples (50 ng) were treated with Ominiscript reverse transcriptase (Qiagen)
to generate cDNA. The cDNAs were then amplified by PCR using Taq polymerase
and TbUAP ORF primers (forward,
5′-aatgagtgacagggacgtgtg-3′; reverse,
5′-ttacatgttcgatgattcgg-3′) and DPMS (Dol-P-Man
synthetase) primers (forward, 5′-aatggatgcggaccttcagcacccac-3′;
reverse, 5′-tagaaccgtgagcgcggtgccatac-3′) to show equal RNA
addition.Southern Blotting—Genomic DNA (5 μg) was digested with
appropriate restriction endonucleases. A DNA probe was made using the
TbUAP ORF and the random primer labeling kit (GE Healthcare). The
probe was then detected using the CDP-Star™ detection kit (GE
Healthcare).TbUAP Protein Expression and Purification—The TbUAP
ORF was cloned into the BamHI site of the expression vector pET15b (Novagen)
to create pET15b-TbUAP, which incorporated a His6 tag when
expressed. Expression was performed using BL21 (DE3) Escherichia
coli. The cells were grown overnight at room temperature with 0.05
mm isopropyl β-d-1-thiogalactopyranoside. Cells
were harvested and washed in 50 mm Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 0.3
m NaCl, 1 mg/ml lysozyme, and Roche complete protease inhibitor
mixture tablets (Roche Applied Science) and then lysed in a French press. The
lysate was cleared by centrifugation (40,000 × g, 60 min, 4
°C), passed through a 0.2-μm filter, and loaded onto a precharged
Ni2+ HiTrap™ chelating HP column (GE Healthcare).
TbUAP-His6 was eluted with 50 mm Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 0.3
m NaCl with 0.1-0.2 m imidazole. The protein was then
dialyzed overnight using a Slide-A-Lyser® dialysis cassette (Pierce) with
10 kDa molecular mass cut-off at 4 °C in 25 mm
Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4 buffer, pH 8.0.
The sample was then filtered as above before being loaded onto a HiTrap™
Q HP-Sepharose column (Amersham Biosciences), preequilibrated with 25
mm Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, pH
8.0. The column was washed with 25 mm
Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, pH 8.0, followed
by a gradient to 25 mm
Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, pH 8.0, 0.5
m NaCl over 30 min. Fractions (3 ml) were collected and checked by
SDS-PAGE. TbUAP-His6-containing fractions were pooled and
concentrated, and the buffer was exchanged to 50 mm Tris-HCl, pH
7.5, 10 mm MgCl2, and 20% glycerol using a Vivaspin
concentrator (Vivascience) 10 kDa molecular mass cut off at 4 °C. The
protein was then stored at -80%.To obtain a PreScission protease cleavable His6-tagged TbUAP
protein, the TbUAP open reading frame was amplified by PCR from the
aforementioned pET15b-TbUAP plasmid using the forward primer,
5′-ctccgcagcagccatcatcatcatcatcacagcagcggcctggaagttctgttccaggggcccggatccATGAGTGACAGGGACGTGTGCATTCAG-3′,
containing an NcoI restriction site (underlined), the coding sequences for
MGSSHHHHHHSSG (italic type), and a PreScission protease cleavage site of
LEVLFQGP (boldface type), followed by a BamHI restriction site (underlined)
and a TbUAP gene-specific sequence (uppercase) and the reverse
primer,
5′-gctcgagatctggatccTTACATGTTCGATGATTCGGAGACCACC-3′,
containing restriction sites for BglII and BamHI (italic type) and a
TbUAP gene-specific sequence (uppercase). The PCR product was cloned
into the pGEM-T Easy PCR cloning vector (Promega) and subsequently digested
with NcoI and BglII and inserted between the NcoI and BamHI sites of the
pET15b protein expression vector (Novagen). The resulting construct,
pET15b-His6-PP-TbUAP, that encodes the full TbUAP coding
sequence preceded by the sequence MGSSHHHHHHSSGLEVLFQGPGS (where PreScission
protease cleaves between the Q and the G) was expressed in E. coli
and purified on an Ni2+ HiTrap™ chelating HP column, as
described above. The sample was then digested with ∼2 mg of
GST-PreScission protease (a kind gift of Bill Hunter; University of Dundee) in
50 mm Tris, pH 8.0, 100 mm NaCl, 10 mm EDTA,
and 1 mm dithiothreitol at room temperature for 4-16 h at 4 °C.
The sample was dialyzed for 2 h using a Slide-A-Lyser® dialysis cassette
(10 kDa molecular mass cut-off) at 4 °C in 2 liters of 50 mm
Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and 50 mm NaCl to remove the EDTA, and then the
sample was passed though a 0.2-μm syringe filter. The sample was passed
through a GSTrap™ HP column (GE Healthcare) connected to an
Ni2+ HiTrap™ chelating HP column. The flow-through was then
dialyzed overnight using a Slide-A-Lyser® dialysis cassette at 4 °C in
1 liter of 25 mm
Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, pH 8.0, with two
changes of buffer. The sample was then passed though a 0.2-μm syringe
filter and further purified using anion exchange chromatography on a
HiTrap™ Q HP-Sepharose column (GE Healthcare).TbUAP Assays—Two methods were used to assay TbUAP. The HPLC
assay used 0.05 μg of TbUAP-His6 incubated in 100 μl of the
HPLC assay buffer (50 mm Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 250 μm
UTP, 10 mm MgCl2, 1 mm dithiothreitol, 20%
glycerol, 250 μm GlcNAc-1-P) for 10 min, terminated by boiling
for 5 min. The samples were analyzed using conditions based on Ref.
34. The HPLC assay buffer was
altered to study substrate specificity, metal ion dependence, and pH
dependence. For substrate specificity, GlcNAc-1-P was changed to glucose1-phosphate, galactose 1-phosphate, or GalNAc-1-P, all at 250
μm. For metal ion dependence, MgCl2 was replaced with
CaCl2, CuCl2, ZnCl2, or MnCl2. For
pH dependence, the Tris-HCl buffer was replaced with a dual buffer of 50
mm Tris, 50 mm sodium acetate with the pH adjusted with
HCl.The TbUAP colorimetric assay was performed with 0.05 μg of
TbUAP-His6 in a 96-well plate format (Nunc™) in 90 μl of
50 mm Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 250 μm UTP, 250
μm GlcNAc-1-P, 10 mm MgCl2, 1
mm dithiothreitol, 20% glycerol, 0.04 units/ml pyrophosphatase
(Sigma). The reaction was left for 10 min and terminated by the addition of
100 μl of the color reagent (0.2% ammonium molybdate, 0.5% Triton X-100,
0.7 nHCl, 0.03% malachite green). Absorbance at 655 nm was
measured after 5 min using a SpectraMax 340 PC (Molecular Devices).Construction of a TbUAP Conditional Null Mutant—The gene
replacement cassettes were generated by PCR amplification of 500 bp of UTR
immediately flanking the 5′- and 3′-ends of the TbUAP ORF
with Taq polymerase using the forward and reverse primers
5′-aaggaaaaaaGCGGCCGCagatgcgtgcacaacaaaaa-3′ and
5′-gtttaaacttacggaccgtcaagctttatctataacacacggagcc-3′
and 5′-gacggtccgtaagtttaaacggatccgtggacgttgcagcgcccgg-3′
and 5′-aaggaaaaaaGCGGCCGCcaccacagttcaccatccag-3, respectively. The two
PCR products were then used in a separate PCR to produce a construct
containing the 5′-UTR linked to the 3′-UTR by a short HindIII,
PmeI, and BamHI cloning site (italic type). The resulting PCR product was then
ligated into pGEM-5Zf(+) vector (Promega) using the NotI site (uppercase).
Antibiotic resistance markers were cloned into the HindIII/BamHI restriction
sites between the two UTRs to produce two constructs, one containing the
PAC (puromycinacetyltransferase) drug resistance gene and one
containing the HYG (hygromycin phosphotransferase) drug resistance
gene. To generate the tetracycline-inducible ectopic copy of the
TbUAP ORF, the Nde1 site in the ORF was silenced using the primers
5′-aagcttgggatagcatacgtgcagattggaa-3′ and
5′-attccaatctgcacgtatgctatcccaagct-3′. The primers
5′-catatgatgagtgacagggacgtgtg-3′ and
5′-ttaattaattacatgttcgatgattcgg-3′ were then used to
PCR-amplify the ORF, which was cloned into the vector pLew100 using the NdeI
and PacI sites (italic type)
(33).These constructs were purified using the Qiagen Maxiprep kit, digested with
NotI to linearize, precipitated, washed twice with 70% ethanol, and
redissolved in sterile water. The linearized DNA was electroporated into
T. brucei bloodstream cells (strain 427, variant 221) that were
stably transformed to express T7 RNA polymerase and the tetracycline repressor
protein under G418 selection. Cell culture, transformation, and selection were
carried out as previously described
(33).MouseInfection Studies—The TbUAP conditional null
mutant cells were subcultured and grown without selection drugs (hygromycin,
puromycin, phleomycin, and G418) for 24 h with and without 1 μg/ml
tetracycline. The parasites were then introduced into groups of five mice
(dosed with and without doxycycline, respectively) by intraperitoneal
injection of 3 × 105 parasites in 0.2 ml of HMI-9 medium. The
plus doxycycline group of animals were dosed with doxycycline in the drinking
water (0.2 mg/ml in a 5% sucrose solution) for 1 week prior to infection and
until the experiment was terminated. Infections were assessed by tail
bleeding, diluting the blood 1:200 in HMI-9 medium and counting on a Neubauer
hemocytometer.TbUAP Localization—Two BALB/c adult mice were used to raise
polyclonal antibodies against His6-tagged TbUAP protein with
Freund's complete adjuvant. Each mouse received two further immunizations with
Freund's incomplete adjuvant over 2 months. Antibodies were then
affinity-purified on CNBr-Sepharose-immobilized TbUAP that had had its
His6 tag removed with PreScission protease.Wild type and TbUAP conditional null mutant bloodstream form
T. brucei cells were grown in HMI-9 medium (with or without 1
μg/ml tetracycline for the conditional null mutant) to a density of 1
× 106 cells/ml over 48 h, harvested by centrifugation, and
resuspended in trypanosome dilution buffer (0.1 m
Na2HPO4, 0.01 m NaH2PO4, 0.025
m KCl, 0.4 m NaCl, 5 mm MgSO4, 0.1
m glucose adjusted to pH 7.45 with HCl) to a density of 4 ×
107 cells/ml. Aliquots (15 μl) were added to 13-mm coverslips
(VWR), left at room temperature for 15 min, fixed in 1 ml of 4%
paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 1 h followed by three
5 min washes in 2 ml of PBS. Cells were permeabilized with 0.05% Triton X-100
in PBS containing 0.5 mg/ml bovineserum albumin for 10 min at room
temperature. Samples were then blocked in 2 ml of PBS, 0.5% bovineserum
albumin, for 1 h at room temperature. The coverslips were incubated with mouse
anti-TbUAP (1:5,000 dilution) and rabbit anti-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
dehydrogenase (GAPDH) antiserum (1:10,000; a kind gift of Paul Michels,
Catholic University of Louvain) in PBS, 0.5% bovineserum albumin. Samples
were then washed, as above, in PBS, 0.5% bovineserum albumin and incubated
with 50 μl of Alexa 594-conjugated anti-mouse IgG and Alexa 488-conjugated
anti-rabbit IgG (containing 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole in the case of
the wild type cells) for 1 h. Coverslips were mounted on glass slides (VWR),
sealed with Hydromount containing 2.5% 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane and left
to dry in the dark for 30 min. Microscopy was performed on a Zeiss Axiovert
200 M fluorescence microscope for wild type cells and on a Zeiss LSM 510 META
confocal microscope for the TbUAP conditional null mutant cells.Substrate specificity of TbUAP. Recombinant TbUAP-His6
was incubated with UTP and different sugar-1-phosphate substrates, as
indicated, and the products were analyzed by HPLC. A sugar nucleotide product
(UDP-GlcNAc) was observed using GlcNAc-1-P (A) but not without
GlcNAc-1-P (B) or with GalNAc-1-P, Glc 1-phosphate, or Gal1-phosphate (C-E, respectively).Sugar Nucleotide Analysis—Sugar nucleotide analysis was
performed as described elsewhere
(19). Briefly, cells were
pelleted by centrifugation, washed in ice-cold PBS, and lysed in 70% ethanol
in the presence of 10 pmol of GDP-glucose internal standard. Sugar nucleotides
were extracted using EnviCarb columns
(35) and analyzed using
multiple reaction-monitoring liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry
(19).Lectin and Antibody Blotting—T. brucei cells washed
with trypanosome dilution buffer and hypotonically lysed in 300 μl of water
containing 0.1 mm 1-chloro-3-tosylamido-7-amino-2-heptone (TLCK)
and 1 μg/ml leupeptin. Cell ghosts were harvested by centrifugation (13,000
× g for 10 min), and the pellet was resuspended in SDS-sample
buffer containing 8 m urea. The lysed extracts were then subjected
to electrophoresis under reducing conditions, with 1.5 × 107
or 5 × 107 cell equivalents/lane, on a NuPAGE® 4-12%
BisTris gradient (Invitrogen) using MOPS SDS running buffer. Proteins were
then transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane under normal Western blotting
conditions. Membranes were stained with Ponceau S solution to demonstrate
equal loading, blocked with 0.25% bovineserum albumin, 0.05% Igepal detergent
(Sigma), 0.15 m NaCl in 50 mm Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, and then
incubated with 0.33 μg/ml biotinylated tomatolectin (Vector Laboratories),
with or without 3 mg/ml chitin hydrolysate (Vector Laboratories), and then
with 1:10,000 diluted ExtraAvidin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (Sigma).
All membranes were then developed by chemiluminescent detection (ECL-plus; GE
Healthcare).To probe for p67, T. brucei was lysed with SDS-sample buffer and
loaded onto a 10% SDS-polyacrylamide gel before being transferred to
nitrocellulose membrane. The membrane was then probed with MAb139 (a kind gift
from Jay Bangs, Madison) at a dilution of 1:2,000 as the primary antibody and
then with 1:10,000 diluted anti-mouse IgG conjugated with horseradish
peroxidase, followed by ECL reagent as described above.Purification and Endoglycosidase Digestion of Soluble Form Variant
Surface Glycoprotein (sVSG)—The VSG coat of trypanosomes can be
conveniently released in a soluble form through osmotic cell lysis at 37
°C. This causes cleavage of the dimyristoylglycerol component of the GPI
membrane anchors by the action of an endogenous GPI-specific phospholipase C
(30). T. brucei
cultures (100 ml) were washed in trypanosome dilution buffer and resuspended
in 300 μl of lysis buffer (10 mm
NaH2PO4-Na2HPO4, pH 8.0, 0.1
mm TLCK, 1 μg/ml leupeptin, and 1 μg/ml aprotinin) and
incubated at 37 °C for 10 min. This was then cooled on ice for 2 min and
centrifuged for 5 min at 16,000 × g, and the supernatant was
applied to 200 μl of DE52 (Whatman) preequilibrated in 10 mm
NaH2PO4-Na2HPO4, pH 8.0, buffer
and eluted with 4 × 200 μl of fresh lysis buffer. The eluates were
pooled and concentrated to ∼100 μl using a YM-10 spin concentrator
(Microcon). The majority of the buffer salts were removed by diafiltration
with three additions of 0.5 ml of water.For each enzyme digestion, sVSG was dissolved at 0.2 μg/μl in 0.5%
SDS, 0.1 m dithiothreitol and boiled for 10 min. For
endoglycosidase H (Endo H) digests, 5 μl of the sVSG was added to 20 μl
of 50 mm sodium citrate, pH 5.5, 10 mm
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 0.025 units of Endo H. For
N-glycosidase F (PNGase F) digests, 5 μl of sVSG was added to 50
mm sodium phosphate, pH 7.5, 0.1% Triton X-100, 10 mm
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 0.025 units of PNGase F. The digests were
then left overnight at 37 °C.Electrospray Mass Spectrometry of sVSG—Intact sVSG was
diluted to 0.05 μg/μl in 50% methanol, 1% formic acid and loaded into
Micromass type-F nanotips. The sVSG was analyzed by positive ion electrospray
tandem mass spectrometry using an Applied Biosystems Q-StarXL instrument, and
the masses were calculated using the Bayesian protein reconstruction algorithm
(ABI Analyst Software).
RESULTS
Identification, Cloning, and Expression of TbUAP—A BLASTp
search of the T. brucei predicted protein data base with Homo
sapiens and Saccharomyces cerevisiae UAP amino acid sequences,
accession numbers NP_003106 and NP_ 010180, revealed a putative TbUAP
gene (gene number Tb11.02.0120). The TbUAP open reading frame was
amplified by PCR using Pfu polymerase from genomic DNA prepared from
T. brucei strain 427. Two different consensus sequences emerged
(accession numbers AM909685 and AM909686), suggesting that there are two
slightly different TbUAP alleles, with eight base pair differences
and one amino acid difference between them (Ser or Gly at position 507).
Southern blot analysis using a TbUAP ORF probe confirmed that TbUAP
is present as a single copy per haploid genome (supplemental Fig. 1). The gene
encoding the Ser-507 variant was used throughout this study. The TbUAP amino
acid sequence contains the expected pyrophosphorylase
LX2GXGTX6PK motif, and 13 of
15 residues shown to be involved in substrate binding in the human UAP crystal
structures (36) are conserved
in the TbUAP sequence (supplemental Fig. 2).The TbUAP ORF was cloned into a pET15b expression vector, with a
His6 tag at the N terminus and a modified pET15b vector with a
PreScission protease site between the protein and the His6 tag.
Both were expressed in E. coli and purified as described under
“Experimental Procedures” (supplemental Figs. 3 and 4). Analysis
of the recombinant TbUAP-His6 protein by analytical
ultracentrifugation (at 1 mg/ml) indicated that the majority (>80%) of
TbUAP is monomeric at this concentration (data not shown).Enzymatic Activity of TbUAP—The activity and substrate
specificity of TbUAP was assessed by incubating recombinant
TbUAP-His6 with UTP and GlcNAc-1-P, GalNAc-1-P, Glc 1-phosphate, or
Gal 1-phosphate and analyzing the products by HPLC. Using GlcNAc-1-P as the
substrate, a single UV-absorbing peak that co-eluted with authentic UDP-GlcNAc
was observed (Fig.
1). No sugar nucleotide product was observed in the
absence of TbUAP-His6 (Fig.
1) or when GalNAc-1-P, Glc 1-phosphate, or Gal1-phosphate was used as a substrate (Fig.
1, ). These data show that GlcNAc-1-P is the preferred
substrate of TbUAP under these conditions.
FIGURE 1.
Substrate specificity of TbUAP. Recombinant TbUAP-His6
was incubated with UTP and different sugar-1-phosphate substrates, as
indicated, and the products were analyzed by HPLC. A sugar nucleotide product
(UDP-GlcNAc) was observed using GlcNAc-1-P (A) but not without
GlcNAc-1-P (B) or with GalNAc-1-P, Glc 1-phosphate, or Gal
1-phosphate (C-E, respectively).
To test the metal ion dependence of the TbUAP-His6 activity, the
enzyme was preincubated with 5 mm EDTA and then incubated with UTP,
GlcNAc-1-P, and 10 mm MgCl2, MnCl2,
CaCl2, CuCl2, ZnCl2, or no divalent cation.
The products of triplicate experiments were analyzed by HPLC, and relative
yields of UDP-GlcNAc were determined. In the presence of EDTA alone, no
detectable UDP-GlcNAc was formed, suggesting that TbUAP is divalent metal
ion-dependent. Similar levels of activity were restored with Mg2+
and Mn2+, whereas Ca2+, Cu2+, and
Zn2+ failed to restore detectable activity (supplemental Fig.
5).The pH dependence of the activity was studied over the pH range 5.0-9.5,
using the same HPLC-based assay. The enzyme displayed a broad pH optimum
between pH 6.0 and 9.0 (supplemental Fig. 6). Based on the aforementioned
experiments, the enzyme was assayed at pH 7.5 in the presence of 10
mm MgCl2.In order to measure the apparent K values for the two
substrates of TbUAP, a discontinuous, colorimetric, coupled assay was
employed. The assay relies on pyrophosphatase to convert the PPi
component of the UTP + GlcNAc-1-P → UDP-GlcNAc + PPi reaction
to inorganic phosphate, which is subsequently measured using malachite green.
The enzyme was assayed with a fixed concentration of UTP and varying
concentrations of GlcNAc-1-P and with a fixed concentration of GlcNAc-1-P and
varying concentrations of UTP (supplemental Figs. 7 and 8). The apparent
K values for UTP and GlcNAc-1-P are 26 ± 6 and 39
± 13 μm, respectively, with a Vmax of
0.4 ± 0.1 nmol/min and a specific activity of 24 ± 6
μmol/min/mg. These values are compared with those of other recombinant
eukaryotic UAPs
(36-38)
in Table 1.
TABLE 1
Comparison of recombinant eukaryotic UAP properties
Species
Molecular mass
GlcNAc-1-P Km
UTP Km
Specific activity
Alternative substrates
Reference/Source
kDa
μm
μm
μmol·min−1·mg−
1
T. brucei (TbUAP)
60.1
39 ± 13
26 ± 6
26 ± 6
None
This study
G. intestinalis (GiUAP)
49.6
300 ± 120
38 ± 17
9.2 ± 1.9, 55.4 ± 11.1
Glc 1-phosphate, GalNAc-1-P
Ref. 38
S. cerevisiae (ScUAP)
53.5
14
21
17
Glc 1-phosphate
Ref. 37
H. sapiens (AgX1)
57.0
5.3
53
69
GalNAc-1-P
Ref. 36
H. sapiens (AgX2)
58.8
6.0
49
68
GalNAc-1-P
Ref. 36
Comparison of recombinant eukaryotic UAP propertiesConstruction of a TbUAP Conditional Null Mutant—In order to
test the hypothesis that UDP-GlcNAc biosynthesis is essential for bloodstream
form T. brucei and that there is no alternate route to this
metabolite, a conditional null mutant of the final step of UDP-GlcNAc
biosynthesis was created by the replacement of both endogenous copies of the
TbUAP gene and the introduction of an ectopic inducible copy of
TbUAP under tetracycline control. A genetically modified strain 427
T. brucei cell line was used to generate the conditional null mutant.
This cell line is engineered to constitutively express T7 polymerase and
tetracycline repressor protein under the control of a T7 promoter. The two
transgenes are maintained under G418 selection
(33). This cell line will be
referred to as “wild type” from hereon.Creation of the bloodstream form A, a schematic representation of the genetic
transformations. The first endogenous allele of TbUAP was replaced
with the PAC gene, creating ΔTbUAP:PAC. The
ectopic copy (pLew100-TbUAP) was then inserted into the rDNA region,
creating ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP. The
second allele of TbUAP was then replaced with the HYG gene,
creating
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP/ΔTbUAP:HYG.
B, Southern blot of the TbUAP conditional null mutant and its
intermediates. Genomic DNA from the wild type and three mutant cell lines
produced during the creation of the TbUAP conditional null mutant was
digested with BglII and NheI and probed with TbUAP open reading
frame. Genomic DNA was from wild type (lane 1),
ΔTbUAP:PAC (lane 2),
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP (lane
3), and the final
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP/ΔTbUAP:HYG
conditional null mutant (lane 4).The first TbUAP allele was replaced by homologous recombination
following electroporation of the parasites in the presence of linear DNA
containing a PAC gene flanked by about 500 bp of TbUAP
5′- and 3′-UTR. Following selection with puromycin, a
ΔTbUAP:PAC clone was selected and transformed with an
ectopic, tetracycline-inducible, copy of TbUAP, introduced into the
ribosomal DNA locus under phleomycin selection
(33). After tetracycline
induction, the second endogenous allele was replaced by a HYG gene to
yield the desired
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP/ΔTbUAP:
HYG clone (Fig.
2). After each round of transformation, genomic DNA was
extracted for Southern blot analysis using a TbUAP ORF probe and
genomic DNA digested with BglII and NheI. Under these conditions, the
endogenous TbUAP gene produces a fragment of ∼5.6 kb, whereas the
ectopic copy produces a fragment of ∼2.5 kb. The blot
(Fig. 2) shows the
successful introduction of the ectopic copy and replacement of both endogenous
alleles in the
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUA-P/ΔTbUAP:HYG
clone used for further studies. This cell line will be referred to from hereon
as the TbUAP conditional null mutant.
FIGURE 2.
Creation of the bloodstream form A, a schematic representation of the genetic
transformations. The first endogenous allele of TbUAP was replaced
with the PAC gene, creating ΔTbUAP:PAC. The
ectopic copy (pLew100-TbUAP) was then inserted into the rDNA region,
creating ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP. The
second allele of TbUAP was then replaced with the HYG gene,
creating
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP/ΔTbUAP:HYG.
B, Southern blot of the TbUAP conditional null mutant and its
intermediates. Genomic DNA from the wild type and three mutant cell lines
produced during the creation of the TbUAP conditional null mutant was
digested with BglII and NheI and probed with TbUAP open reading
frame. Genomic DNA was from wild type (lane 1),
ΔTbUAP:PAC (lane 2),
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP (lane
3), and the final
ΔTbUAP:PAC/TbUAP/ΔTbUAP:HYG
conditional null mutant (lane 4).
The TbUAP Gene Is Essential to Bloodstream Form T. brucei in Vitro and
in Vivo—Triplicate cultures of wild type and TbUAP
conditional null mutant cells, under permissive and nonpermissive conditions
(i.e. with and without tetracycline, respectively), were inoculated
at 1 × 105 cells/ml and subcultured every 2 days. The
TbUAP conditional null mutant cultures under permissive conditions
had a reduced growth rate and grew to approximately half the cell density of
the wild type but were otherwise healthy
(Fig. 3, ). Under nonpermissive conditions the cells grew for 2
days but, upon subculturing, failed to grow for more than 5 days
(Fig. 3). The
eventual resumption of growth is typical of bloodstream form T.
brucei conditional null mutants for essential genes
(6,
14,
18,
39-42),
whereby the essential gene becomes constitutively active through loss of
tetracycline control due to deletion of the tetracycline repressor protein
gene (14). Analysis by reverse
transcription-PCR confirmed that TbUAP mRNA was undetectable by 12 h
of tetracycline removal but that the cells that resumed growth, 10 days after
tetracycline removal, were reexpressing TbUAP mRNA
(Fig. 3).
FIGURE 3.
A, growth curves for wild
type cells, subcultured every 2 days. B, growth curves for
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells, subcultured every 2 days, grown
under permissive (plus tetracycline) conditions. C, growth curves for
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells grown under nonpermissive (minus
tetracycline) conditions. D, ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel of
reverse transcription-PCR products from RNA extracted from TbUAP
conditional null mutant cells after 0, 2, 6, 12, and 48 h and 10 days without
tetracycline, as indicated. The upper panel shows reverse
transcription-PCR products using TbUAP primers, the middle
panel is a control without reverse transcriptase, and the lower
panel is a control using Dol-P-Man synthetase (DPMS) primers to
show equal RNA input.
A, growth curves for wild
type cells, subcultured every 2 days. B, growth curves for
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells, subcultured every 2 days, grown
under permissive (plus tetracycline) conditions. C, growth curves for
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells grown under nonpermissive (minus
tetracycline) conditions. D, ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel of
reverse transcription-PCR products from RNA extracted from TbUAP
conditional null mutant cells after 0, 2, 6, 12, and 48 h and 10 days without
tetracycline, as indicated. The upper panel shows reverse
transcription-PCR products using TbUAP primers, the middle
panel is a control without reverse transcriptase, and the lower
panel is a control using Dol-P-Man synthetase (DPMS) primers to
show equal RNA input.The TbUAP conditional null mutant cells were subcultured and grown
for 24 h with and without tetracycline and then introduced into groups of five
mice that were dosed with or without doxycycline in the drinking water. The
animals dosed with the drug showed high blood parasitemias (>3 ×
107/ml) within 4 days and were sacrificed, whereas the
doxycycline-free animals did not show any signs of infection for up to 14
days, when the experiment was terminated. These data show that the
TbUAP gene is essential to bloodstream form T. brucei both
in vitro and in vivo.Subcellular Localization of TbUAP—To obtain antibodies,
TbUAP-His6 was used to inoculate mice and the resulting anti-serum
was affinity-purified on a column of recombinant PreScission protease-treated
(tag-free) TbUAP coupled to CNBr-Sepharose beads. The mouse anti-TbUAP
affinity-purified antibody was used together with rabbit anti-GAPDH antibody
as a glycosomal marker. The secondary antibodies were anti-mouseAlexa 594
(red) and anti-rabbitAlexa 488 (green). The fluorescence
micrographs of wild type cells show that the anti-GAPDH co-localized with the
anti-TbUAP, indicating that TbUAP is located in glycosome microbodies in
bloodstream form T. brucei (Fig.
4, ). A similar experiment was performed with the
TbUAP conditional null mutant grown with and without tetracycline for
48 h. The results show that the TbUAP signal co-localizes with the glyosomal
GAPDH marker (as before) (Fig. 4,
) but that the intensity of the TbUAP signal is
greatly reduced after 48 h without tretracycline
(Fig. 4, ),
demonstrating the strict specificity of the antibody for TbUAP in
immunofluorescence microscopy.
FIGURE 4.
Subcellular localization of TbUAP. Wild type (A-C) and
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells grown with tetracycline
(D-F) and without tetracycline for 48 h (G-I) were stained
with rabbit anti-GAPDH (a glycosomal marker) and Alexa 488 anti-rabbit
(green channel; A, D, and G) and affinity-purified
mouse anti-TbUAP and Alexa 594 anti-mouse (red channel; B,
E, and H). Merged images are shown in C, F,
and I. The merged image in I also includes a
4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole stain (blue) for DNA. No
significant signals were obtained when primary antibodies were omitted (data
not shown).
Sugar Nucleotide Levels in the TbUAP Conditional Null
Mutant—To analyze the effect of the selective removal of
TbUAP gene expression on parasite UDP-GlcNAc levels, sugar
nucleotides were extracted from the TbUAP conditional null mutant
under permissive and nonpermissive conditions, chromatographed as described in
(35), and quantitated by the
method described in Ref. 19.
Briefly, sugar nucleotides were extracted from T. brucei, separated
by reverse phase HPLC and quantitated by multiple reaction monitoring tandem
mass spectrometry using an internal standard (GDP-glucose), a sugar nucleotide
that is not found in trypanosomes. The multiple reaction monitoring approach
exploits characteristic transitions between precursor and product ions to
identify specific metabolites in complex mixtures. For example UDP-GlcNAc
gives rise to an [M-H]- precursor ion at m/z 606
that fragments to produce a major product ion of
[UDP-H2O]- at m/z 385. Thus, a
chromatogram of the mass transition 606 → 385 is highly selective for
UDP-GlcNAc. Similarly, GDP-Man and GDP-Glc can be monitored using the
[GDP-Hex]- to [GDP-H2 O]- transition of
m/z 604 → 424. Representative chromatograms
(Fig. 5) illustrate the
dramatic reduction in UDP-GlcNAc levels, relative to the GDP-Glc internal
standard, in the TbUAP conditional null mutant after 48 h in the
absence of tetracycline. These data and the effects on other sugar nucleotides
are summarized in (Table 2).
The levels of UDP-Glc, UDP-Gal, and GDP-Man in the TbUAP conditional
null cell line under permissive conditions agree reasonably well with the wild
type levels determined previously
(19). However, even under
permissive conditions, the level of UDP-GlcNAc is significantly lower in the
conditional null mutant (16 pmol/1 × 107 cells) than in the
wild type (80 pmol/1 × 107 cells). The reduced level may be
because TbUAP expression is no longer under the control of its
endogenous promoter but rather under the control of the procyclin promoter in
the pLew100-TbUAP ectopic copy. Thus, the lower growth rate of the
mutant under permissive conditions may be a result of the reduced level of
UDP-GlcNAc. Under nonpermissive conditions, the cells stopped dividing between
48 and 60 h and died, by cell lysis, by around 72 h. At 48 h, the level of
UDP-GlcNAc was 2.9 pmol/1 × 107, <5% of wild type
levels.
FIGURE 5.
Measurement of sugar nucleotides in the Representative
liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry chromatograms of sugar
nucleotides extracted from the TbUAP conditional null mutant before
(A) and after (B) withdrawal of tetracycline for 48 h. The
upper chromatogram in each panel shows the peaks
corresponding to GDP-Man and the GDP-Glc internal standard, and the lower
chromatogram shows the peak corresponding to UDP-GlcNAc.
TABLE 2
Sugar nucleotide levels in the TbUAP conditional null mutant
under permissive and nonpermissive conditions
Sugar nucleotide
Wild
typea
TbUAP cKO (0
h)b
TbUAP cKO (48
h)b
pmol/107 cells
pmol/107 cells
pmol/107 cells
UDP-GlcNAc
80 ± 20
16
2.9
GDP-Man
5.6 ± 3.9
9.5
19
UDP-Gal
55 ± 3
44
35
UDP-Glc
123 ± 7
141
70
Sugar nucleotide levels for wild type T. brucei taken from Ref.
19.
Values are the means of two independent measurements.
Sugar nucleotide levels in the TbUAP conditional null mutant
under permissive and nonpermissive conditionsSugar nucleotide levels for wild type T. brucei taken from Ref.
19.Values are the means of two independent measurements.Subcellular localization of TbUAP. Wild type (A-C) and
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells grown with tetracycline
(D-F) and without tetracycline for 48 h (G-I) were stained
with rabbit anti-GAPDH (a glycosomal marker) and Alexa 488 anti-rabbit
(green channel; A, D, and G) and affinity-purified
mouse anti-TbUAP and Alexa 594 anti-mouse (red channel; B,
E, and H). Merged images are shown in C, F,
and I. The merged image in I also includes a
4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole stain (blue) for DNA. No
significant signals were obtained when primary antibodies were omitted (data
not shown).Changes in the levels of other sugar nucleotides in the TbUAP
conditional null mutant under nonpermissive conditions were less profound
(Table 2). However, when the
level of UDP-GlcNAc falls, there is an accumulation of GDP-Man. Since the
consumption of GDP-Man for protein N-glycosylation and GPI anchor
synthesis depends on the availability of UDP-GlcNAc, an accumulation of
GDP-mannose is not unexpected. The reason for the reduction in UDP-Glc and
UDP-Gal levels, to about 60% of wild type, is less clear. However, a
comparable phenomenon was seen in the TbGalE (UDP-Glc
4′-epimerase) conditional null mutant, where rapid loss of UDP-Gal under
nonpermissive conditions was followed by a reduction in UDP-Glc and UDP-GlcNAc
levels (16).Effects of UDP-GlcNAc Starvation on Protein
Glycosylation—Ricin, which binds nonreducing terminal galactose
residues, has been shown to bind to the flagellar pocket of T. brucei
(43) and to the
endosomal/lysosomal system of the parasite
(27). The
poly-N-acetyllactosamine-specific (Galβ1-4GlcNAc), lectin from
Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato) has also been shown to bind
exclusively to glycoproteins in the flagellar pocket and endosomal/lysosomal
system in T. brucei
(26). The ricin and tomatolectin binding oligosaccharide structures were characterized and were shown to
include a family of unusually large N-linkedpoly-N-acetyllactosamine-containing glycans with an average of 54
N-acetyllactosamine repeats/glycan
(27).The effect of UDP-GlcNAc starvation on these structures was assessed using
Western blots of whole cell lysates from wild type and the TbUAP
conditional null mutant cell lines probed with tomatolectin. A large smear
was detected in the wild type cell lysate, which decreased progressively from
0 to 48 h in the absence of tetracycline in the TbUAP conditional
null mutant (Fig. 6).
The decrease in intensity, and a downward shift in apparent molecular weight,
of the tomatolectin binding high molecular weight glycoproteins indicated a
reduction in total poly-N-acetyllactosamine synthesis as the cellular
levels of UDP-GlcNAc fall. The specificity of the tomatolectin blot for
carbohydrate was confirmed by including chitin hydrolysate, a tomatolectin
inhibitor (Fig. 6).
To distinguish whether this reduction in tomatolectin binding was
specifically caused by UDP-GlcNAc starvation and not just a general phenomenon
in dying cells, the same experiment was performed with a TbGPI12
conditional null mutant (6).
This is another (lethal) glycosylation conditional null mutant but, this time,
in the GPI biosynthetic pathway. Under nonpermissive (without tetracycline)
conditions, this cell line also ceases cell division and dies, but, in this
case, the cell lysate blots showed relatively little change in tomatolectin
binding (supplemental Fig. 9).
FIGURE 6.
Tomato lectin blotting of wild type the A, extracts of wild type and TbUAP
conditional null mutant (TbUAP cKO) cells 0, 24, and 48 h after
tetracycline removal (as indicated) were subjected to SDS-PAGE, transferred to
nitrocellulose, and probed with biotinylated tomato lectin followed by
horseradish peroxidase-streptavidin. B, as in A, except that
the tomato lectin inhibitor, chitin hydrolysate, was included with the
lectin.
To observe the effects of UDP-GlcNAc starvation on a specific glycoprotein,
wild type and TbUAP conditional null mutant cells, grown in the
presence and absence of tetracycline for 24 and 48 h, were harvested, lysed,
and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting with the p67-specific monoclonal
antibody MAb139 (supplemental Fig. 10). The intensity of the staining was
slightly decreased, compared with wild type, in the TbUAP conditional
null mutant under permissive conditions (0 h), which may reflect the overall
difference in UDP-GlcNAc levels between the mutant and wild type cell line
described earlier. After 48 h in the absence of tetracycline, both the
intensity and the apparent molecular weight of the p67 smear had decreased.
This result suggests that p67 glycosylation is impaired by UDP-GlcNAc
starvation.Measurement of sugar nucleotides in the Representative
liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry chromatograms of sugar
nucleotides extracted from the TbUAP conditional null mutant before
(A) and after (B) withdrawal of tetracycline for 48 h. The
upper chromatogram in each panel shows the peaks
corresponding to GDP-Man and the GDP-Glc internal standard, and the lower
chromatogram shows the peak corresponding to UDP-GlcNAc.To further demonstrate that the poly-N-acetyllactosamine
structures were being affected by UDP-GlcNAc starvation, wild type, and the
TbUAP conditional null mutant cells, after 0, 24, and 48 h without
tetracycline, were analyzed using fluorescence microscopy
(Fig. 7, ). Cells
were fixed onto coverslips and incubated with biotinylated tomatolectin and
fluorescein-conjugated streptavidin. Using this approach,
poly-N-acetyllactosamine structures specific to the flagellar pocket
and endosomal/lysosomal region were visualized in the wild type cells
(Fig. 7). The
specificity of this reaction was confirmed by including chitin hydrolysate as
a tomatolectin inhibitor (Fig.
7). Little difference in tomatolectin staining was seen
in the TbUAP conditional null mutant cells after 24 h in the absence
of tetracycline (Fig. 7, ), but after 48 h, almost no signal was seen within the
flagellar pocket or endosomal/lysosomal region
(Fig. 7). These
results correlate well with the tomatolectin blot data in
(Fig. 6). To assist
in orienting the tomatolectin staining, results using wild type cells and
including 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole staining to highlight the
positions of the nuclear and kinetoplast DNA, are included
(Fig. 7, ).
FIGURE 7.
Fluorescence microscopy of tomato lectin binding to wild type and
Wild type (WT) and
conditional null mutant (cKO) cells after 0, 24, and 48 h without
tetracycline were visualized by phase-contrast and tomato lectin fluorescence
microscopy, as indicated (A-E). Also shown are wild type cells
stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and tomato
lectin (TL) (F-J).
To assess the effects of UDP-GlcNAc starvation on gross cellular morphology
and flagellar pocket morphology, including the appearance of the flagellar
pocket lumenal contents, wild type cells and TbUAP conditional null
mutant cells, grown in the absence of tetracycline for 48 h, were subjected to
scanning and transmission electron microscopy (supplemental Figs. 11 and 12,
respectively). However, no significant differences in the images were
recorded.To observe the effects UDP-GlcNAc starvation had on VSG glycosylation, sVSG
was purified from wild type and TbUAP conditional null mutant cells,
grown in the presence and absence of tetracycline for 48 h. Analysis by
SDS-PAGE and Coomassie Blue staining revealed that sVSG from wild type and
TbUAP conditional null cells grown under permissive conditions appear
as single bands, whereas sVSG from the TbUAP conditional null grown
for 48 h in the absence of tetracycline appeared as a doublet
(Fig. 8). The formal
possibility that the altered sVSG profile may have been caused by the cells
switching VSG expression to a new VSG variant was eliminated by tryptic mass
fingerprinting, by which both bands were positively identified as VSG221 (data
not shown).
FIGURE 8.
Endoglycosidase digestions of sVSG221 from wild type and A, sVSG221 purified from wild type
and TbUAP conditional null mutant (TbUAP cKO) cells before
(0 h) and after 48 h without tetracycline (48 h) were subjected to SDS-PAGE
and Coomassie Blue staining. B, aliquots of wild type sVSG221 were
digested with Endo H (that removes only oligomannose N-linked
glycans) or PNGase F (that removes all N-linked glycans), and the
products were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Coomassie Blue staining. Species
containing two, one, and no N-linked glycans were resolved, as
indicated. C, aliquots of sVSG221 from TbUAP conditional
null cells grown for 48 h without tetracycline were digested with Endo H or
PNGase F, and the products were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Coomassie Blue
staining. Species containing two, one, and no N-linked glycans were
resolved, as indicated.
Tomatolectin blotting of wild type the A, extracts of wild type and TbUAP
conditional null mutant (TbUAPcKO) cells 0, 24, and 48 h after
tetracycline removal (as indicated) were subjected to SDS-PAGE, transferred to
nitrocellulose, and probed with biotinylated tomatolectin followed by
horseradish peroxidase-streptavidin. B, as in A, except that
the tomatolectin inhibitor, chitin hydrolysate, was included with the
lectin.Aliquots of sVSG from wild type cells and the TbUAP conditional
null mutant grown for 48 h in the absence of tetracycline were digested with
the enzymes Endo H and PNGase F and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie Blue
staining. As previously described
(44), wild type sVSG showed a
small shift in molecular weight when digested with Endo H, due to the removal
of the C-terminal oligomannose N-linked glycan, and a greater shift
when digested with PNGase F, due to the removal of both N-linkedglycans (Fig. 8).
When the sVSG from the TbUAP conditional null mutant was digested
with Endo H, the upper band collapsed into the lower band, and when digested
with PNGase F, both bands collapsed into a fully deglycosylated form
(Fig. 8). These data
suggest that the VSG doublet present in the mutant represents VSG molecules
that are similar to those found in wild type (i.e. the upper band)
and VSG molecules that have selectively lost an Endo H-sensitive
N-linked glycan (i.e. the lower band).To analyze this further, the sVSG samples were analyzed by electrospray
mass spectrometry (Fig. 9).
Wild type and TbUAP conditional null mutant cells grown under
permissive conditions gave the expected glycoform mass ranges for sVSG221
(16,
44)
(Table 3). However, sVSG from
the TbUAP conditional null mutant grown under nonpermissive
conditions for 48 h displayed two discrete sets of sVSG glycoforms,
corresponding to the two bands seen by SDS-PAGE. One set was similar to that
of wild type sVSG, except that it lacks the higher molecular weight glycoforms
that contain five GlcNAc residues (Table
3). The other set of glycoforms have masses consistent with the
absence of oligomannose structures at the C-terminal (Asn-428) N-glycosylation
site (consistent with the Endo H resistance of the lower VSG band on
SDS-PAGE). Analysis of the glycopeptide fraction of a Pronase digest of the
mutant VSG sample, prepared and analyzed by electrospray tandem mass
spectrometry according to Ref.
54, revealed a range of
Asn-263 and Asn-428N-linked glycopeptide and Ser-433 GPIglycopeptide species4
similar to those of wild type VSG (supplemental Fig. 13). These results rule
out the possibility that lower molecular weight VSG glycoforms arise from
changes at the N-linked and GPIglycosylation sites that happen to be
equivalent in mass to the loss of the oligomannose structures from
Asn-428.
FIGURE 9.
Electrospray mass spectrometry of sVSG221 from wild type and
Aliquots of sVSG221 from
wild type cells (A) and TbUAP conditional null mutant cells
grown in the presence of tetracycline (B) and the absence of
tetracycline for 48 h (C) were analyzed by positive ion electrospray
mass spectrometry, and the data were processed by Baysian protein
reconstruction to produce mass graphs of isobaric glycoforms. Models of some
of the principal glycoforms are indicated, and the compositions of the
detected glycoforms are shown in Table
3.
TABLE 3
Compositions of isobaric forms of sVSG
The measured masses (from Fig.
9) for sVSG221 samples from wild type (WT) and TbUAP
conditional null cells grown with (cKO + Tet) or without tetracycline (cKO -
Tet) for 48 h are tabulated in that order, followed by (in parentheses) the
theoretical mass of the assigned VSG composition (Theo.). NA, not available.
The abundance of each isobaric group of VSG molecules is indicated as follows:
+++, mass peaks >70% of the biggest species; ++, mass peaks >40% of the
biggest species; +, mass peaks <40% of the biggest species.
Measured (and theoretical) molecular mass of WT/+Tet/−Tet (Theo.)
Proteina
GlcN-Ino-cPb
EtNPb
HexNAc
Hexose
WT
CKO + Tet
CKO − Tet
Da
51,542/51,546/NA (51,531)
1
1
1
5
23
+
+
−
51,500/51,505/NA (51,490)
1
1
1
4
24
+
+
−
51,379/51,384/NA (51,369)
1
1
1
5
22
+
+
−
51,338/51,343/NA (51,328)
1
1
1
4
23
+
+
−
51,215/51,219/NA (51,207)
1
1
1
5
21
+
+
−
51,174/51,179/NA (51,166)
1
1
1
4
22
+
+
−
51,053/51,058/NA (51,045)
1
1
1
5
20
+
+
−
51,012/51,017/51,016 (51,004)
1
1
1
4
21
+
+
+
50,891/50,897/50,895 (50,883)
1
1
1
5
19
+
+
−
50,850/50,856/50,854 (50,842)
1
1
1
4
20
+++
+++
+++
50,688/50,694/50,691 (50,680)
1
1
1
4
19
++
++
++
50,526/50,531/50,530 (50,518)
1
1
1
4
18
+
+
+
50,364/50,369/50,368 (50,356)
1
1
1
4
17
+
+
+
NA/NA/49,311 (49,302)
1
1
1
2
13
−
−
+
NA/NA/49,149 (49,140)
1
1
1
2
12
−
−
+++
NA/NA/48,987 (48,978)
1
1
1
2
11
−
−
+++
NA/NA/48,826 (48,816)
1
1
1
2
10
−
−
+
NA/NA/48,663 (48,654)
1
1
1
2
9
−
−
+
NA/NA/48,501 (48,492)
1
1
1
2
8
−
−
+
The average molecular weight of sVSG221 polypeptide (46,284 Da) minus amino
acids 1-27 (signal peptide) and residues 460-476 (GPI attachment signal
sequence) with four disulphide bonds
(44).
Components of GPI common to all glycoforms of sVSG221: GlcN-Ino-cP,
glucosamine-α1-6-myo-inositol-1,2-cyclic phosphate; EtNP,
ethanolamine phosphate.
Compositions of isobaric forms of sVSGThe measured masses (from Fig.
9) for sVSG221 samples from wild type (WT) and TbUAP
conditional null cells grown with (cKO + Tet) or without tetracycline (cKO -
Tet) for 48 h are tabulated in that order, followed by (in parentheses) the
theoretical mass of the assigned VSG composition (Theo.). NA, not available.
The abundance of each isobaric group of VSG molecules is indicated as follows:
+++, mass peaks >70% of the biggest species; ++, mass peaks >40% of the
biggest species; +, mass peaks <40% of the biggest species.The average molecular weight of sVSG221 polypeptide (46,284 Da) minus amino
acids 1-27 (signal peptide) and residues 460-476 (GPI attachment signal
sequence) with four disulphide bonds
(44).Components of GPI common to all glycoforms of sVSG221: GlcN-Ino-cP,
glucosamine-α1-6-myo-inositol-1,2-cyclic phosphate; EtNP,
ethanolamine phosphate.Taken together, these data show that under UDP-GlcNAc starvation, the
elaboration of the Man3GlcNAc2 and
Man4GlcNAc2 glycans at the fully occupied Asn-263
N-glycosylation site glycans with GlcNAc and Galβ1-4GlcNAc is
significantly reduced and that the occupancy of the C-terminal Asn-428 site is
selectively and dramatically reduced.
DISCUSSION
Whereas some enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism in T. brucei are
closer to their prokaryote counterparts
(45,
46), this is not the case for
TbUAP, which has 31% sequence identity and 50% sequence similarity to its
human counterpart and, unlike its bacterial counterpart, glmU, is not fused to
a glucosamine-1-phosphateN-acetyltransferase domain
(47).Analysis of the recombinant UAP from T. brucei demonstrated that
TbUAP is a conventional divalent cation-dependent pyrophosphorylase with
kinetic parameters similar to those reported for other eukaryotic UAPs.
However, TbUAP differs from most other UAPs in that it is highly selective for
its sugar phosphate substrate, accepting only GlcNAc 1-phosphate, and that it
is compartmentalized in a microbody, the glycosome.With respect to the former, the inability of TbUAP to accept GalNAc-1-P
reflects the fact that T. brucei, like all of the trypanosomatids,
does not incorporate GalNAc into its glycoconjugates (reviewed in Ref.
19). Thus, the organism has no
need to make UDP-GalNAc either from GalN or GalNAc or by epimerization of
UDP-GlcNAc. Accordingly, both TbUAP (this study) and TbGalE
(15) are exclusively
GlcNAc-1-phosphate- and UDP-Glc/Gal-specific, respectively. This is unlike
their mammalian counterparts that can also utilize GalNAc-1-P
(36) and UDP-GlcNAc/GalNAc
(48), respectively. Comparison
of the TbUAP sequence with those of the humanAgX1 and AgX2 UAP splice
variants, for which there are crystal structures
(36), indicates that TbUAP has
a conserved active site, containing only a 2-amino acid difference among the
15 identified substrate-interacting residues (i.e. Arg-313 in place
of Pro-288 and Ala-489 in place of Lys-455). Peneff et al.
(36) reported that the
equatorial GlcNAc C4 hydroxyl of UDP-GlcNAc forms one hydrogen bond with
Gly-290 and one with Asn-327 of AgX1 and that the axial GalNAc C4 hydroxyl of
UDP-GalNAc forms two hydrogen bonds with Asn-327. The equivalent residues in
TbUAP are Gly-315 and Asn-352. However, the context of the key Asn residue
(underlined) in TbUAP is KFNCANISSNLC
whereas in the AgX enzymes it is
LFNAGNIANHFF. Nonequivalent adjacent
residues (in italic type), particularly the bulkier CA versus AG
sequence immediately before the Asn residue, may affect the latter hydrogen
bond network and account for the observed selectivity of TbUAP for GlcNAc-1-P
over GalNAc-1-P. We are attempting to crystallize TbUAP to resolve this
issue.Fluorescence microscopy of tomatolectin binding to wild type and
Wild type (WT) and
conditional null mutant (cKO) cells after 0, 24, and 48 h without
tetracycline were visualized by phase-contrast and tomatolectin fluorescence
microscopy, as indicated (A-E). Also shown are wild type cells
stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and tomatolectin (TL) (F-J).With respect to the glycosomal, rather than cytosolic, location of the
native enzyme, a recent computational search of the T. brucei, T.
cruzi, and Leishmania major genomes did not identify their UAPs
as glycosomal enzymes (45).
However, that study used the PTS1 Prosite pattern PS00342 of
(STA-GCN)-(RKH)-(LIVMAFY)$ (where $ denotes the end of the protein)
supplemented with the pattern S-S-(LIF)$. Thus, the TbUAP C-terminal
tripeptide sequence, SNM$, did not pass this filter. On the other hand, the
same authors noted that the most abundant residues, in order of frequency, in
T. brucei PTS1 sequences are (SAGPYN)-(KHRNQ)-(LM-AVY)$, indicating
that although the SNM$ permutation has not been identified previously as a
T. brucei PTS1 sequence, it appears to be one. Significantly, the
C-terminal tripeptide sequences of the T. cruzi and L. major
UAPs are GNM$ and ANM$, respectively, which also fit the aforementioned
potential PTS1 permutations. It remains to be determined experimentally
whether a C-terminal (SGA)-NM$ sequence is sufficient for glycosomal import.
The alternative is that TbUAP is targeted to the glycosome through association
with another PTS1 or PTS2 targeted protein, as has been described previously
for peroxisomal import
(49).In all trypanosomatids, the two-step conversion of glucose to fructose
6-phosphate, via hexokinase and glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, occurs in the
glycosome, and it is conceivable that the entire UDP-GlcNAc biosynthetic
pathway is located in this organelle. Although
glucosamine-fructose-6-phosphate transaminase, glucosamine-phosphate
N-acetyltransferase, and phosphoacetylglucosamine mutase lack obvious
PTS1 or PTS2 sequences, the T. cruzi and L. major
glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase sequences do contain PTS1 sequences
(46). This enzyme catalyzes
the reverse reaction to glucosamine-fructose-6-phosphate transaminase. Our
current hypothesis, which we are currently testing, is that
glucosamine-fructose-6-phosphate transaminase, glucosamine-phosphate
N-acetyltransferase, and phosphoacetylglucosamine mutase are
piggybacked into the glycosome via oligomerization with glucose-6-phosphate
isomerase and/or glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase and/or TbUAP to provide
functional UDP-GlcNAc synthesis machinery in a single location. Indeed, it may
be that all sugar nucleotide biosynthesis occurs in this location in
trypanosomes, since both UDP-Glc 4′-epimerase and GDP-Man
4,6-dehydratase, required for in UDP-Gal and GDP-Fuc synthesis, respectively,
have also been shown to be glycosomal in T. brucei
(15,
18). A glycosomal location for
the synthesis of sugar nucleotides further suggests that there may be specific
transporters or antiporters in the glycosome membrane to, for example,
exchange UTP for UDP-sugars and GTP for GDP-sugars or NDP-sugars for
PPi. In this regard, it is worth noting that, whereas mostsugar
nucleotide antiporters exchange NDP-sugars for NMPs
(50) (requiring nucleoside
diphosphatases to convert NDPs to NMPs), NDP-sugar/NDP and NDP-sugar/NDP-sugar
antiporter activities have also been recently reported
(51).Endoglycosidase digestions of sVSG221 from wild type and A, sVSG221 purified from wild type
and TbUAP conditional null mutant (TbUAPcKO) cells before
(0 h) and after 48 h without tetracycline (48 h) were subjected to SDS-PAGE
and Coomassie Blue staining. B, aliquots of wild type sVSG221 were
digested with Endo H (that removes only oligomannoseN-linkedglycans) or PNGase F (that removes all N-linked glycans), and the
products were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Coomassie Blue staining. Species
containing two, one, and no N-linked glycans were resolved, as
indicated. C, aliquots of sVSG221 from TbUAP conditional
null cells grown for 48 h without tetracycline were digested with Endo H or
PNGase F, and the products were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Coomassie Blue
staining. Species containing two, one, and no N-linked glycans were
resolved, as indicated.Electrospray mass spectrometry of sVSG221 from wild type and
Aliquots of sVSG221 from
wild type cells (A) and TbUAP conditional null mutant cells
grown in the presence of tetracycline (B) and the absence of
tetracycline for 48 h (C) were analyzed by positive ion electrospray
mass spectrometry, and the data were processed by Baysian protein
reconstruction to produce mass graphs of isobaric glycoforms. Models of some
of the principal glycoforms are indicated, and the compositions of the
detected glycoforms are shown in Table
3.The phenotype generated through UDP-GlcNAc starvation with regard to tomatolectin binding is similar to that caused by UDP-Gal starvation
(16) (i.e. a
reduction in lectin binding in Western blots and fluorescence microscopy),
indicating a reduction in both size and quantity of the giant poly-LacNAc
structures normally found throughout the flagellar pocket and
endosomal/lysosomal system
(26,
27). This is not a general
phenomenon of dying trypanosomes. For example, tomatolectin blots remain
unchanged for a TbGPI12 conditional null mutant
(6) under nonpermissive
conditions (supplemental Fig. 9). Transmission electron microscopy images of
gold-conjugated ricin binding in the flagellar pocket had suggested that the
bloodstream form-specific fibrous material in the flagellar pocket might
correspond to ricin-binding glycoconjugates
(43). However, although a
significant reduction in tomatolectin binding was observed in this study,
transmission electron microscopy images did not show a significant reduction
in the fibrous material when compared with wild type cells. This suggests that
the fibrous material is either unrelated to the poly-LacNAc-containing
glycoproteins of the flagellar pocket or that the fibrous appearance of the
glycoproteins in transmission electron microscopy is unaffected by reducing
their poly-LacNAc content. Hopefully, future studies on the composition of the
lumenal contents of the flagellar pocket will resolve this issue.Another way of assessing the glycosylation phenotype of bloodstream form
T. brucei mutants is to use the abundant VSG as a reporter and to
assess the status of its two N-glycosylation sites and GPI anchor
(16,
44). In the case of UDP-Gal
starvation, the copy number and integrity of the VSG coat is not affected,
although the GPI anchors, which normally sport an average of five Gal side
chain residues, are free of galactose
(16). The effect on VSG
glycosylation was very different under UDP-GlcNAc starvation. Mass
spectrometry and endoglycosidase digestion of VSG221 isolated from the
TbUAP conditional null mutants under nonpermissive conditions
revealed the presence of two major species of VSG221 in approximately equal
amounts. One form was almost indistinguishable from wild-type VSG221, whereas
the other, lower molecular mass form, specifically lacked the C-terminal
(Asn-428) N-linked glycan. From a hierarchical point of view, it is
not surprising that GPI anchor synthesis is maintained, even when protein
N-glycosylation and N-glycan elaboration are affected, since
GPI synthesis and transfer to protein are clearly essential to bloodstream
form T. brucei
(5-8).
Furthermore, from a structural point of view, the Asn-263 N-linkedglycan may be more important to the correct folding of the VSG. Blum et
al. (52) analyzed the
crystal structures of two VSG variants, VSG ILTat.1.24 and VSG221, and found
that a short α-helix in ILTat.1.2 is absent in VSG221 but replaced by
the protein-proximal sugars of the Asn-263 N-linked glycan. However,
this does not provide a mechanistic explanation for the hierarchy of Asn-263
N-glycosylation in strict preference to the N-glycosylation
of Asn-428 under UDP-GlcNAc starvation. Radiolabeling studies suggest that
bloodstream form T. brucei contain very low steady-state levels of
Man9GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol and a relatively large pool of
Man5GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol
(53). Despite their
differences in abundance, the organism appears to use both of these
oligosaccharyl-PP-dolichol species for transfer to protein, the former to
sites destined to contain oligomannose glycans and the latter to sites
destined to become complex type structures
(44). In most eukaryotes, a
single type of dolichol-PP-linked oligosaccharide precursor
(Glc3Man9GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol) is transferred
to the nascent peptide in the ER through the action of
oligosaccharyltransferase (OST), a complex of typically eight different
proteins (54). Trypanosomatids
lack candidate genes for all but the catalytic subunit, STT3, of this complex.
However, there are three copies of the TbSTT3 gene in the T.
brucei genome. Two of the TbSTT3 genes encode almost identical
proteins, and we speculate that the unique TbSTT3 utilizes either exclusively
Man5GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol or
Man9GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol and that one or both of the two
similar TbSTT3s utilizes the other donor. Under UDP-GlcNAc starvation, GDP-Man
levels rise slightly, and presumably Dol-P-Man is also present at greater than
normal levels. From this point of view, one might expect the ratio of
Man9GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol/Man5GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol
to increase slightly. However, the absolute levels of both precursors are
presumably significantly reduced as UDP-GlcNAc becomes limiting for the
synthesis of the common GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol core. Thus, the
simplest explanation for the selective loss of the C-terminal oligomannoseN-linked glycans from VSG221 under UDP-GlcNAc starvation is that the
effective concentration of Man9GlcNAc2-PP-dolichol falls
so far below the effective K for the relevant TbSTT3 that
most VSG molecules appearing in the ER fail to receive a C-terminal
N-glycan. Comparative studies on the substrate specificities and
kinetic parameters of the two classes of TbSTT3 should resolve this issue.
Meanwhile, additional support for such a dual oligosaccharyltransferase model
comes from the analysis of a T. brucei ALG3 mutant that can only make
Man5GlcNAc2 and that also underglycosylates the
C-terminal Asn-428 site of VSG221
(55) and from pulse-chase
studies that show, in at least two different VSGs, that Endo H-sensitive
oligomannose sites (but not Endo H-resistant sites) can be
N-glycosylated post-translationaly
(30,
56).Finally, through the creation of the conditional null mutant,
TbUAP was shown to be essential for the growth and survival of
bloodstream T. brucei in culture, suggesting that this enzyme might
be considered as a potential therapeutic target for human African sleeping
sickness. Further in vivo support for this notion was obtained when
the TbUAP conditional null was shown to be infectious to mice dosed
with doxycycline in their drinking water but not to doxycycline-free mice.
Although the essentiality of UDP-GlcNAc biosynthesis via TbUAP was expected,
experimental validation in vitro and in vivo is,
nevertheless, important, since it rules out any possible metabolic and/or
nutritional bypasses. Compared with other conditional null mutants generated
in this laboratory, the ablation of UDP-GlcNAc synthesis led to more rapid
killing of the parasite (<72 h) than ablation of either UDP-Gal synthesis
(14,
16) or GPI biosynthesis
(6), which both take 4-5 days.
The rapidity of cell death presumably reflects the fact that UDP-GlcNAc is
simultaneously required for GPI anchor biosynthesis, core protein
N-glycosylation, and the subsequent decoration of complex
N-glycans with lactosamine units. Of course, UDP-GlcNAc is also
essential to mammalian cells
(57), and selective inhibition
of the parasite UAP would be a therapeutic requirement.
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