ABSTRACT
Phosphoarginine is a cell energy buffer molecule synthesized by the enzyme arginine kinase. In Trypanosoma cruzi, the aetiological agent of Chagas' disease, 2 different isoforms were identified by data mining, but only 1 was expressed during the parasite life cycle. The digitonin extraction pattern of arginine kinase differed from those obtained for reservosomes, glycosomes and mitochondrial markers, and similar to the cytosolic marker. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed that although arginine kinase is localized mainly in unknown punctuated structures and also in the cytosol, it did not co-localize with any of the subcelular markers. This punctuated pattern has previously been observed in many cytosolic proteins of trypanosomatids. The knowledge of the subcellular localization of phosphagen kinases is a crucial issue to understand their physiological role in protozoan parasites.
Subject(s)
Arginine Kinase/isolation & purification , Arginine Kinase/metabolism , Subcellular Fractions/metabolism , Trypanosoma cruzi/enzymology , Animals , Arginine Kinase/genetics , Computational Biology , Digitonin/chemistry , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Isoenzymes/metabolism , Life Cycle Stages , Trypanosoma cruzi/genetics , Trypanosoma cruzi/growth & developmentABSTRACT
Pyruvate phosphate dikinase (PPDK) was recently reported in trypanosomatids, but its metabolic function is not yet known. The present work deals with the cellular localization and the function of the Trypanosoma cruzi enzyme. First, we show by digitonin titration and cell fractionation that the enzyme was essentially present in the glycosome matrix of the epimastigote form. Second, we address the issue of the direction of the reaction inside the glycosome for one part, our bibliographic survey evidenced a quite exergonic DeltaGo' (at least -5.2 kcal/mol at neutral pH and physiologic ionic strength); for another part, no pyrophosphatase (PPase) could be detected in fractions corresponding to the glycosomes; therefore, glycosomal PPDK likely works in the direction of pyruvate production. Third, we address the issue of the origin of the glycosomal pyrophosphate (PPi): several synthetic pathways known to produce PPi are already considered to be glycosomal. This work also indicates the presence of an NADP(+)-dependent beta-oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA in the glycosome. Several pyruvate-consuming activities, in particular alanine dehydrogenase (ADH) and pyruvate carboxylase (PC), were detected in the glycosomal fraction. PPDK appears therefore as a central enzyme in the metabolism of the glycosome of T. cruzi by providing a link between glycolysis, fatty acid oxidation and biosynthetic PPi-producing pathways. Indeed, PPDK seems to replace pyrophosphatase in its classical thermodynamic role of displacing the equilibrium of PPi-producing reactions, as well as in its role of eliminating the toxic PPi.
Subject(s)
Diphosphates/metabolism , Microbodies/metabolism , Pyruvate, Orthophosphate Dikinase/metabolism , Trypanosoma cruzi/metabolism , Alanine Dehydrogenase , Amino Acid Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Animals , Blotting, Western , Carbonates/chemistry , Detergents/pharmacology , Digitonin/chemistry , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Glycolysis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Ions , Models, Biological , NADP/chemistry , Octoxynol , Oxygen/metabolism , Polyethylene Glycols/pharmacology , Pyruvate Carboxylase/chemistry , Pyruvates/chemistry , Subcellular Fractions/metabolism , ThermodynamicsABSTRACT
Glucosephosphate isomerase (PGI; EC 5.3.1.9) of Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes was found in about the same proportion in the glycosome and the cytosol. This subcellular distribution is similar to that of Leishmania mexicana, but contrasts with that of T. brucei bloodstream form, where the enzyme is essentially restricted to the glycosome. Glucosephosphate isomerase was highly purified from a glycosome-enriched fraction and to about 70% purity from the soluble extract. Both enzymes displayed Michaelis-Menten-Henri kinetics. Km values for fructose 6-phosphate were 0.125 +/- 0.07 and 0.80 +/- 0.10 mM for the glycosomal and the cytosolic PGIs, respectively. Erythrose-4-phosphate, 6-phosphogluconate and mannose-6-phosphate were inhibitors for both PGIs. Phosphogluconate and erythrose phosphate showed higher affinity for cytosolic PGI than for glycosomal PGI, by 2.5- and 4-fold respectively. The PGIs differed slightly in their isoelectric point (7.1 +/- 0.15 and 7.5 +/- 0.12) and optimum pH range. Both PGIs also differed in their chromatographic properties (ion-exchange and phenyl Sepharose), indicating a difference in charge and hydrophobicity, with the glycosomal enzyme being more hydrophobic. The molecular mass of both PGIs was 186,000 +/- 9000 Da, which is higher than that of other known PGIs, including those from T. brucei and other trypanosomatids. The molecular mass of the subunit, 63 kDa, is similar to that of PGIs from other sources. It appears that PGIs from T. cruzi are trimeric, in contrast with all other known PGIs which are dimeric.