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Trypanosoma cruziVDU deubiquitinase mediates surface protein trafficking and infectivity

Authors :
Normanda Souza-Melo
Nathalia Brito Silva
Amaranta Muniz Malvezzi
Gregory Pedroso dos Santos
Laura Maria Alcântara
Carolina de Lima Alcantara
Narcisa Leal da Cunha e Silva
Martin Zoltner
Mark C. Field
Sergio Schenkman
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Ubiquitylation is a post-translational modification promoting protein degradation. Within the endomembrane system ubiquitylation marks proteins for lysosomal processing. Deubiquitinases (DUBs) cleave ubiquitin from modified proteins and, in the case of surface proteins, prevent lysosomal targeting and thus play a major role in controlling turnover. InTrypanosoma cruzi,the etiological agent of Chagas disease, acquisition of nutrients in parasites proliferating within the blood meal of insect vectors occurs via the cytostome, a unique structure connected to a long tubular cytopharynx. Contents are delivered to late endosomes and accumulate in reservosomes, equivalent to lysosomes. When starved,T. cruzidifferentiates into mammalian infective trypomastigotes, which are cell cycle arrested. Here we asked what roles ubiquitylation plays in this unique endocytic process by interrogation of theT. cruziortholog of VDU (von Hippel-Lindau-interacting deubiquitylating enzyme)/USP33 (ubiquitin-specific protease). We found that TcVDU expression level inversely correlated with transferrin endocytosis, and that overexpression led to a longer retention of the endocytic cargo near the cytostome. TcVDU itself was found enriched in the anterior region of the parasite, in proximity to endocytic cargo. Most importantly, TcVDU overexpression reduced parasite invasion capacity and led to increased release oftrans-sialidase. These alterations in the abundance of multiple surface proteins in TcVDU mutants indicate a key role of TcVDU in modulating theT. cruzisurface by affecting the endosomal traffic and consequently the host-parasite interface.Author summaryTrypanosoma cruziis the cause of Chagas disease that affects large populations of Central and South America. Disease is spreading to other continents due to poor control of blood transfusion from donors with chronic and undiagnosed infection, migration and drug treatment with limited performance and undesired side effects. Proliferating forms ofT. cruziacquire nutrients through the cytostome, a cell surface opening connected to a long tubular cytopharynx. Internalized material is endocytosed in the cytopharynx. This is distinct from other members of the Trypanosomatids, which endocytose material exclusively through the flagellar pocket. By using CRISPR gene editing and overexpression we demonstrated that a conserved deubiquitinase (VDU) is a key control element for traffic from the cytopharynx to endosomal compartments inT. cruzi. Changed levels of VDU modify endosomal traffic and largely impact the parasite surface, causing changes in infectivity.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f65933b23046a90b56654d714465a178