| Literature DB >> 32968006 |
Mulaka Maruthi1, Liqin Ling1,2, Jing Zhou2, Hangjun Ke3.
Abstract
Malaria remains a huge global health burden, and control of this disease has run into a severe bottleneck. To defeat malaria and reach the goal of eradication, a deep understanding of the parasite biology is urgently needed. The mitochondrion of the malaria parasite is essential throughout the parasite's life cycle and has been validated as a clinical drug target. In the asexual development of Plasmodium spp., the single mitochondrion grows from a small tubular structure to a complex branched network. This branched mitochondrion is divided at the end of schizogony when 8 to 32 daughter cells are produced, distributing one mitochondrion to each forming merozoite. In mosquito and liver stages, the giant mitochondrial network is split into thousands of pieces and daughter mitochondria are segregated into individual progeny. Despite the significance of mitochondrial fission in Plasmodium, the underlying mechanism is largely unknown. Studies of mitochondrial fission in model eukaryotes have revealed that several mitochondrial fission adaptor proteins are involved in recruiting dynamin GTPases to physically split mitochondrial membranes. Apicomplexan parasites, however, share no identifiable homologs of mitochondrial fission adaptor proteins with yeast or humans, except for Fis1. Here, we investigated the localization and essentiality of the Fis1 homolog in Plasmodium falciparum, PfFis1 (PF3D7_1325600), during the asexual life cycle. We found that PfFis1 requires an intact C terminus for mitochondrial localization but is not essential for parasite development or mitochondrial fission. The dispensable role of PfFis1 indicates that Plasmodium contains additional fission adaptor proteins on the mitochondrial outer membrane that could be essential for mitochondrial fission.IMPORTANCE Malaria is responsible for over 230 million clinical cases and ∼half a million deaths each year. The single mitochondrion of the malaria parasite functions as a metabolic hub throughout the parasite's developmental cycle (DC) and also as a source of ATP in certain stages. To pass on its essential functions, the parasite's mitochondrion needs to be properly divided and segregated into all progeny during cell division via a process termed mitochondrial fission. Due to the divergent nature of Plasmodium spp., the molecular players involved in mitochondrial fission and their mechanisms of action remain largely unknown. Here, we found that the only identifiable mitochondrial fission adaptor protein that is evolutionarily conserved in the Apicomplexan phylum, Fis1, it not essential in P. falciparum asexual stages. Our data suggest that malaria parasites use redundant fission adaptor proteins on the mitochondrial outer membrane to mediate the fission process.Entities:
Keywords: Apicomplexa; Fis1; PfFis1; Plasmodium falciparumzzm321990; malaria; malaria parasite; mitochondrial fission; mitochondrion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32968006 PMCID: PMC7568643 DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00579-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSphere ISSN: 2379-5042 Impact factor: 4.389
Primers used in this study
| ID | Name | Sequence |
|---|---|---|
| P1 | PfFis1AvrIIFP | taCCTAGGATGGATAGTCCAGAATTACTTAAAATAG |
| P2 | PfFis1BsiWIRP | taCGTACGAAAATACTTGAAAGATTTAAAAGATAAATATAAAC |
| P3 | Fis1KDgRNA1 | CATATTTCATATTAAGTATATAATATTGTTAGTTGCACTCACAGCTTGGTTTCAGAGCTATGCTGGAAAC |
| P4 | Fis1KDgRNA2 | CATATTTCATATTAAGTATATAATATTGCATTGATATACAAAAGCTCAGTTTCAGAGCTATGCTGGAAAC |
| P5 | Fis1KOgRNA1 | TCATATTAAGTATATAATATTAGCGTAATCAAATTGAGTCTGTTTCAGAGCTATGCTGGA |
| P6 | Fis1KOgRNA2 | CATATTAAGTATATAATATTGATATTTTTTTCTGAACGTTCGTTTCAGAGCTATGCTGGA |
| P7 | Fis1KDgRNA1-N20 | GTTAGTTGCACTCACAGCTTG |
| P8 | Fis1KDgRNA2-N20 | GCATTGATATACAAAAGCTCA |
| P9 | Fis1KOgRNA1-N20 | AGCGTAATCAAATTGAGTCT |
| P10 | Fis1KOgRNA2-N21 | GATATTTTTTTCTGAACGTTC |
| P11 | N20CheckR | ATATGAATTACAAATATTGCATAAAGA |
| P12 | ReverseOligo | TAGGAAATAATAAAAAAGCACCGACTCG |
| P13 | Fis15′HRFP | tgTCCGGAGAAAATGTTAGTAAATAAAAAAAAAAATAC |
| P14 | Fis15′HRRevApaI | CAGGGCCCTTAAAAATACTTGAAAGATTTAAAAGATA |
| P15 | Fis13′UTRFP | atCTTAAGGAGCATTATAAAAAAATATAAGTGTAACG |
| P16 | Fis13′UTRRP | taTCCGGAGATATCGACGTTCATTTCATCTAATAAAAC |
| P17 | Fis1KO5′HRFP | TCCATGGTGCATGGTATATGAGATCGGTATG |
| P18 | Fis1KO5′HRRP | TGAATTCTCTGGACTATCCATTTTCTGGT |
| P19 | Fis1KO3′HRFP | GACTAGTCGATGCAAGAAATAGTAATGCTTTAG |
| P20 | Fis1KO3′HRRP | ACCGCGGACCGTTGCATATATACAACG |
| P21 | Fis1KD 5′CHK | ctCCATTGCCGTATATGCCACAAAAAAAAGTAATAC |
| P22 | 3'TetRCheck | ATATTTCATGTCTCAGTAAAGTCTTTCAATAC |
| P23 | PMG75seqF | CTTTAAATTCATGCAAAAATTTAC |
| P24 | Fis1KD 3′CHK | atCGGCCGCTGTTGAAGGTGAGAACAAGCA |
| P25 | Fis1KO 5′CHK | TCTATCATATACGAGAATTCTTGC |
| P26 | Fis1KO5′HRFP | TCCATGGTGCATGGTATATGAGATCGGTATG |
| P27 | hDHFR-HpaIRev | taGTTAACttaATCATTCTTCTCATATACTTCAAATTTGTAC |
| P28 | hDHFR-NarIFwd | atGGCGCCaaaaATGCATGGTTCGCTAAACTGCATC |
| P29 | PfFis1KO3′CHK | ACTCGCCTTATACATTTAAAGCA |
| P30 | Fis1qRTFp | TCAATTTGATTACGCTTGTTTGTT |
| P31 | Fis1qRTRp | GCATCGATTTTTAATAAGGCATTT |
| P32 | seryl-tRNA synthetase_F | AAGTAGCAGGTCATCGTGGTT |
| P33 | seryl-tRNA synthetase_R | TTCGGCACATTCTTCCATAA |
ID, identifier.
FIG 1PfFis1 localization with N- or C-terminal tagging and PfFis1 KD without tags. (A) The pLN-based construct used for ectopic expression of N-terminal 3HA-tagged PfFis1. The CTS of PfFis1 (KSFKYF) is highlighted in red. Representative IFA images show localization of 3HA-PfFis1. Parasites were probed with mouse anti-HA (green), MitoTracker (red), and DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) (blue) and merged with differential interference contrast (DIC). Scale bar, 2 μm. Western blotting data show the expression of 3HA-PfFis1. Anti-HA and anti-PfEXP2 (loading control) antibodies were used. (B) The pLN-based construct used for ectopic expression of C-terminal 3Myc-tagged PfFis1. Representative IFA images show localization of PfFis1-3Myc. Parasites were probed with mouse anti-Myc (green), MitoTracker (red), and DAPI (blue) and merged with DIC. Scale bar, 2 μm. Western blotting data show the expression of PfFis1-3Myc. Anti-Myc and anti-PfEXP2 (loading control) antibodies were used. (C) CRISPR/Cas9-based system used to integrate the TetR-DOZI-aptamer system at the 3′ end of the endogenous PfFis1 gene. Positions of primers used as described for panel D are highlighted. (D) Diagnostic PCR showing the correct genotype of the PfFis1 KD line after genome editing. The PCR product of primers P21 and P22 shows the 5′ integration; the PCR product of primers P23 and P24 shows the 3′ integration; the PCR product of primers P21 and P24 shows the WT genotype. Primers P21 and P24 failed to amplify any bands from the KD parasites due to the large size of the fragment to be amplified (>11 kb). Control PCRs contained no-template DNA. (E) Analysis of PfFis1 transcripts in the KD parasites via qRT-PCR. At each time point, the PfFis1 transcription level in the aTc-minus culture was compared to that in the aTc-plus culture (the latter was normalized to 100%). Seryl-tRNA synthetase was used as an internal control. Error bars indicate standard deviations of results from triplicate samples; this experiment was repeated two times. (F) Effect of PfFis1 KD on the growth of P. falciparum. To quantify the growth, parasites were subjected to Percoll enrichment, and equal numbers of PfFis1KD parasites were grown in the presence and absence of aTc in the medium (+aTc and −aTc, respectively) for 12 days (6 IDCs). Parasitemia was quantified on alternate days, and the parasitemia value was multiplied by the parasite dilution factor to produce a measure of cumulative growth. All data points represent means ± standard deviations (SD) of results from three independent experiments. TRP1, tetratricopeptide repeat 1; TRP2, tetratricopeptide repeat 2; TM, transmembrane domain.
FIG 2PfFis1KO does not affect mitochondrial fission. (A) A schematic representation showing the CRISPR/Cas9-mediated replacement of PfFis1 open reading frame (ORF) with the hDHFR cassette. Positions of primers used as indicated in panel B are highlighted. (B) Diagnostic PCRs showing the correct genotype of the PfFis1KO line after genome editing. The PCR product of primers P25 and P28 shows 5′ integration; the PCR product of primers P27 and P29 shows 3′ integration; the PCR product of primers P26 and P29 shows the entire locus. The KO band (3.5 kb) is bigger than the WT band (1.8 kb) due to insertion of the hDHFR cassette. (C) Growth curve analysis of PfFis1KO line compared to D10 WT. The two parasite lines were tightly synchronized and diluted to an initial parasitemia level of 1% at ring stages and monitored by analyzing Giemsa-stained blood smears over 12 days. All data points represent means ± SD of results from three independent experiments. (D) Morphology of the PfFis1KO parasites analyzed using Giemsa-stained blood smears. Scale bars equal 2 μm. (E) Live parasite analysis of mitochondrial morphologies. Live PfFis1KO and D10 WT parasites were treated with MitoTracker (10 nM) for 30 min and washed three times. Images were acquired at the ring, trophozoite, and schizont stages. Scale bars equal 2 μm. (F) Growth competition between PfFis1KO and D10 WT parasites. The housekeeping gene seryl-tRNA synthetase was used as an internal control.