(Received for publication, June 10, 1996, and in revised form, September 17, 1996)
From the Vienna International Research Cooperation Center,
Institute of Immunology and the ¶ Department of
Vascular Biology and Thrombosis Research, University of Vienna, A-1235
Vienna, Austria and § Sandoz Forschungsinstitut
Vienna, A-1235 Vienna, Austria
The schizont stage of the protozoan parasite Theileria parva induces features characteristic of tumor cells in infected bovine T-cell lines. Most strikingly T. parva-infected cell lines acquire unlimited growth potential in vitro. Their proliferative state is entirely dependent on the presence of a viable parasite within the host cell cytoplasm. It has been postulated that parasite proteins either secreted into the host cell or expressed on the parasite surface membrane are involved in the parasite-host cell interaction. We used an in vitro transcription-translation-membrane translocation system to identify T. parva-derived cDNA clones encoding secretory or membrane proteins. Within 600 clones we found one encoding a 17-kDa protein which is processed by microsomal membranes to a 14-kDa protein (11E), presumably by signal peptidase. The processed form is expressed in the T-cell line TpM803 harboring viable parasites. By immunolocalization we show that the 11E protein mostly resides within the parasite, often in close vicinity to membranous structures, but in addition it appears at the surface membrane. Amino acid sequence comparison suggests that 11E belongs to the glutaredoxin family, but is unique so far in containing a signal sequence for endoplasmic reticulum membrane translocation.
Theileria parva is an obligate intracellular protozoan
parasite that infects cattle and causes a usually fatal disease called East Coast Fever. The major pathogenic stage of the life cycle, the
schizont, is found in the cytoplasm of infected bovine lymphocytes and
replicates synchronously with the infected host cell. Infected lymphocytes undergo blast transformation and multiplication, resulting in a massive lympho-proliferation followed by lymphocytolysis and death
of the host (for review, see Ref. 1). Schizont-containing cell lines
can be maintained in vitro as permanently transformed lymphoblastoid cells exhibiting unlimited growth potential (reviewed in
Ref. 2). Proliferation of T. parva-infected cell lines is accompanied by the presence of high levels of activated NF-B in the
nucleus (3), the constitutive expression of high affinity IL-21 receptors and the secretion of IL-2.
After killing the parasite by antitheilericidal drug BW720c levels of
activated NF-
B decrease rapidly, expression of high affinity IL-2
receptor and IL-2 ceases, and the lymphocytes stop to proliferate.
This reversibility of the system implies that parasite factors, most likely proteins, induce and maintain host cell transformation. Parasite proteins, which directly interact with the host cell, have to be exported into the host or expressed on the parasite surface membrane. In eucaryotes most secretory and surface proteins use a common intracellular transport pathway. This pathway is entered by translocation of the nascent polypeptide across the ER membrane (4, 5). This entry step can be reconstituted in heterologous cell free translation systems (6, 7). For proteins of different protozoan parasites it has been shown that they can be translocated across microsomal membranes and processed by a signal peptidase (8-10).
We have employed an in vitro transcription-translation-translocation assay to identify secretory and membrane proteins of the T. parva schizont. 600 individual T. parva cDNA clones were expressed in the cell-free system and screened for translation products, which were translocated across microsomal membranes. One cDNA clone (plasmid 11E) was identified encoding a secretory type protein, which is synthesized as a 17-kDa precursor protein and becomes processed by microsomal membranes to the 14-kDa mature form (11E). Based on the amino acid sequence we predict a signal sequence of 24 amino acids (11). In a T. parva-infected bovine T-cell line (TpM803) only the 14-kDa form is expressed. By immunofluorescence staining we found 11E protein located within the parasite. Higher resolution analysis by immuno-electron microscopy suggests that 11E is predominantly associated with intraparasitic membrane structures and the surface membrane.
11E shows significant homology on the amino acid level to glutaredoxins including conservation of the active center motif. Glutaredoxins belong to a superfamily of thiol active oxidoreductases and have been defined by their ability to reduce glutathione mixed disulfides, which distinguishes them from the related thioredoxin family (reviewed in Ref. 12). Glutaredoxins are ubiquitously found in diverse organisms as Escherichia coli (13-15), yeast (16), plants (17), mammals (18-21), and even encoded by viruses (22-24). Glutaredoxins act in vivo as cofactor for ribonucleotide reductase (12, 14). Further physiological functions of glutaredoxins are assumed but less established, like cofactor function for other enzymes (25, 26), regeneration of cytoplasmic ascorbic acid (26), and restoration of oxidatively damaged proteins (27, 28).
Compared with the described glutaredoxin sequences T. parva 11E has a cleavable signal peptide for entering the classical secretory pathway and an additional N-terminal extension of 26 amino acids. So far no secreted glutaredoxin family member has been described. However, a human thioredoxin family member was shown to be secreted and involved in activation and transformation of virally infected lymphocytes (29, 30).
The characteristics and maintenance of the bovine lymphocyte cell line TpM803 persistently infected with T. parva Muguga have been described previously (31). TpM803 cells were cured of the parasite by culturing for 7 days in the presence of the theilericidal drug BW720c (Coopers Animal Health Ltd., Beckhamsted, United Kingdom) at a concentration of 50 ng/ml. For cultivation of cured TpM803 for more than 8 days, 10 units/ml of recombinant human IL-2 (Amersham Corp.) and 50 ng/ml TPA were added to the medium. Concanavalin A-stimulated bovine lymphocytes were cultured as described (32).
cDNA Library ConstructionT. parva schizont poly(A)+ RNA was prepared from cell line TpM803 as described previously (32). cDNA was synthesized (Amersham synthesis kit), ligated to EcoRI linkers and inserted into plasmid vector pGem3 (Promega).
cDNA Screening by in Vitro Transcription-Translation-TranslocationThe E. coli
strain DH5 was transformed by the T. parva-pGem3 cDNA
library. Plasmid DNA of 600 randomly picked clones was digested with
EcoRI, and the insert size was analyzed on 1% agarose gels.
Clones containing inserts larger than 0.2 kilobase pair were analyzed
further.
For in vitro transcription T. parva-pGem3 plasmids were linearized by ScaI and transcription was carried out in a 20-µl volume containing 1 µg of linearized DNA and 5 units of T7 or SP6 RNA polymerase at 37 °C for 1 h (33).
2 µl of the transcription reaction was translated in wheat germ lysate in the presence of L-[35S]methionine as described (14). For membrane translocation of synthesized polypeptides, rough microsomes derived from dog pancreas were included in the translation (7).
To test for membrane translocation of in vitro synthesized proteins across, or insertion into, the microsomal membrane accessability to proteinase K (PK) was used. A 10-µl aliquot of the translation mixture containing rough microsomes was incubated for 15 min at 25 °C with either 0.3 mg/ml of PK or 0.3 mg/ml of PK and 0.5% Nonidet P-40. Further proteolysis was stopped by addition of phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride to 0.1 mg/ml. Samples were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography (34).
To remove secretory and peripheral membrane proteins, rough microsomes were subjected to carbonate extraction with 0.1 M Na2CO3, pH 11 (35).
Southern and Northern BlotsGenomic DNA from concanavalin A-stimulated lymphocytes, TpM803 cells, T. parva piroplasms was prepared according to standard procedures as was poly(A)+ RNA from infected and drug-treated TpM803 cells (32, 36). Genomic Southern and Northern blot analyses were performed in a standard fashion (37). Blots were washed for 30 min each in 2 × SSC, 0.1% SDS at room temperature, 1 × SSC, 0.1% SDS at 65 °C, 2 × with 0.1 × SSC at 65 °C.
DNA Sequencing and AnalysisThe cDNA insert 11E was subcloned as a HindIII-PvuII fragment into plasmids pUC18/19 (Life Technologies, Inc.) and sequenced. Nucleotide and amino acid sequence analysis and comparison were carried out using the GCG program and the GenBankTM/EMBL data base (38).
Preparation of 11E Fusion ProteinA
HindII-PvuII fragment of plasmid 11E-pGem3
encoding the C-terminal portion of protein 11E, starting with residue
56 was cloned into the SmaI site of plasmid pEX3. The
bacterial -galactosidase-11E fusion protein was prepared and
gel-purified as described (39).
A female Chinchilla rabbit was
injected intradermally with 200 µg of the purified
-galactosidase-11E fusion protein, emulsified in complete Freund's
adjuvant, on days 1, 9, 15, 22, and 43. Preimmune serum was collected
on day 1 prior to immunization, and the immune serum used in the
experiments was prepared on day 50.
Antiserum 27 was depleted of antibodies
toward -galactosidase by adsorption to bacterial proteins blotted
onto nitrocellulose membranes. pEX3-transformed E. coli
cells were spread on LB agar plates, grown overnight at 30 °C to
confluent layers, transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, then induced
at 42 °C for 2 h and lysed. Bacterial proteins were blotted
onto the nitrocellulose, DNase-treated, washed, and blocked for
1.5 h as for Western blots (39). Antiserum 27 was diluted 1:20 in
0.2% gelatin, phosphate-buffered saline, 0.1% Tween 20, 20 µg/ml
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 0.05% NaN3 and incubated
with the filters for 18 h at 4 °C. The solution was collected
and lack of reactivity toward
-galactosidase was confirmed by
Western blotting. Next, the lysate of TpM803 cells was separated on
preparative 18% SDS-polyacrylamide gels and transferred to a
nitrocellulose membrane. The localization of the antigens specifically
recognized by antiserum 27 was determined by Western blotting with test
strips using the
-galactosidase-depleted antibody fraction, the
preimmune and immune serum 27 serving as controls. The region
containing the 14-kDa antigen was excised, and the remainder of the
membrane was incubated with the
-galactosidase-depleted antiserum as
above. The adsorption to TpM803 cell blots, from which the 14-kDa 11E
antigen had been removed, was repeated twice. For these experiments
cell lysates were used in which the 10-kDa antigen was not detectable.
The reactivity of the depleted serum was tested toward proteins of the
TpM803 cell lysate by Western blotting, as above. The resultant
antibody preparation reacted exclusively with the 14- and 10-kDa
antigens in Western blots (see Fig. 5). The specificity of depleted
antiserum 27 was controlled on Western blots by recognition of a
glutathione S-transferase fusion protein containing the
identical 11E C-terminal segment as in the
-galactosidase fusion
protein (data not shown).
Metabolic Cell Labeling and Immunoprecipitation
TpM803 cells were sedimented, resuspended at 5 × 105 cells/ml in methionine/cysteine-free minimum essential medium supplemented with 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 2 mM L-glutamine, 0.5% fetal calf serum, 3.75 MBq/ml each of L-[35S]methionine and L-[35S]cysteine and cultured for 18 h. Cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline and lysed on ice with precooled buffer containing 1% Nonidet P-40, 0.1% SDS, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 20 µg/ml phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 µM leupeptin, 0.3 µM aprotinin, and 1 µM pepstatin. Debris was pelleted by a 5-min spin in a microcentrifuge, and the resultant supernatant was clarified by ultracentrifugation for 1 h at 4 °C, 100,000 × g. After posttranslational in vitro assays, antigens in a 50-µl aliquot were solubilized by adding 2 volumes of cell lysis buffer. Samples were incubated with 5 µl of preimmune or antiserum 27 for 2 h at 4 °C. Immunocomplexes were collected on 40 µl of 50% (w/v) protein A-Sepharose slurry, washed, and prepared for SDS-PAGE as described (34).
Western BlotsProtein lysates of bacteria and lymphocytes were prepared, separated by SDS-PAGE, electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, and probed with rabbit sera as described (34). Detection of the primary antibody was with peroxidase-coupled donkey anti-rabbit Ig (Amersham diluted 1:5000) and diaminobenzidene substrate reaction (40).
ImmunofluorescenceIndirect staining and Hoechst 33258 staining of formaldehyde-fixed, permeabilized TpM803 cells with
depleted antiserum 27 or preimmune serum was performed essentially as
described (34). Briefly cells were washed with phosphate-buffered
saline, centrifuged onto coverslips (Shandon cytofuge, 1000 rpm, 5 min), fixed, and incubated with depleted rabbit serum 27 diluted 1:10.
Detection was with rhodamine-conjugated donkey F(ab)2
anti-rabbit IgG (Dianova, Hamburg, diluted 1:400). For double staining
with the DNA dye Hoechst 33258, 1 µg/ml was included in the secondary
reagent solution. Photographs were taken on a Zeiss Axioskop microscope
using Fuji Neopan 1600 professional film.
Cell suspensions were fixed for 1 h at room temperature in 4% glutaraldehyde, 0.5 mM calcium chloride, 0.2% picric acid in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. The cells were centrifuged at 500 × g for 5 min and processed according to (41), except that cells were dehydrated in ethanol and embedded in Lowicryl HM 20. Ultra-thin sections were cut and immunolabeled with depleted immune serum 27 as described (42). Control sections were incubated in preimmune serum. Detection was with 5-nm colloidal gold particles conjugated with goat anti-rabbit IgG (Amersham) followed by silver enhancement (Amersham kit).
We were interested in determining proteins which are directly involved in the interaction of T. parva and its host the bovine T-lymphocyte. Since the schizont stage of T. parva is obligate intracellular and cannot be cultured in a free form, we developed a general method to identify proteins which enter the secretory pathway of eucaryotic cells. Our screening system is based on cell-free expression of cDNA in an in vitro transcription-translation-membrane translocation system. Proteins which fulfil the criterion of being translocated across ER-derived membranes are prime candidates to be exported or transported to the cell surface via the secretory transport route.
Screening about 600 clones of a schizont cDNA library we identified
clone 11E, which upon cell-free expression encodes a protein product
with the characteristics of a secretory protein (Fig. 1). The 11E transcript was translated into a polypeptide
with apparent molecular mass of 17 kDa (lane 1). When
translation was carried out in the presence of rough microsomes (RM),
an additional form of 14 kDa size was observed (lane 3).
Following addition of PK, the 17-kDa form was digested, whereas the
14-kDa form was protected from protease (lane 4). After
solubilization of the microsomal membranes and PK treatment, the 14-kDa
form was digested to a 10-kDa PK-resistant fragment (lane
5). Similarly bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase has been
shown to be partially resistant to PK digestion (43). We conclude that
the primary translation product of 17 kDa was translocated across the
microsomal membrane and processed to a 14-kDa form presumably by signal
peptide cleavage.
11E transcript was translated in the presence of RM and membrane integration of the 14-kDa form was tested by carbonate extraction of salt-washed microsomes at pH 11 (35). The pellet fraction (P) and the supernatant fraction (S) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 1). The 14-kDa form was exclusively found in the S fraction, which indicates that this form is not integrated into the membrane and behaves like secretory type proteins. The 17-kDa form is found in both fractions. Its presence in the supernatant can be explained by polypeptide chains not translocated but loosely associated with the microsomes. Its presence in the pellet fraction is due to inefficient processing by signal peptidase as has been observed for other proteins (44).
cDNA Clone 11E Is Derived from the T. parva Genome and Expressed in T. parva-infected LymphocytesAfter having
identified the cDNA clone 11E we wanted to show that it is T. parva-specific and not derived from the host cell. We performed
Southern blot analysis with genomic DNA from concanavalin A-stimulated
lymphocytes, a T. parva-infected T-cell line (TpM803), and
T. parva piroplasms. As shown in Fig. 2, a
single specific band was detected for TpM803 cells and piroplasms upon
hybridization with the 11E cDNA probe. No signal was obtained with
DNA from concanavalin A-stimulated bovine lymph node cells. DNA from
isolated T. parva piroplasms was used to confirm that 11E
gene was of parasite origin. Integrity of bovine genomic DNAs used in
this experiment was controlled by hybridization with bovine actin
cDNA (data not shown).
To show expression of the 11E gene we performed Northern analysis using
11E cDNA as hybridization probe (Fig. 3).
Noninfected concanavalin A-stimulated bovine lymph node cells (ConA)
were negative. A single transcript of 0.6 kilobase pair was detected in
TpM803 cells (TpM). In TpM803 cells that had been cured from the parasite by treatment with the theilericidal drug BW720c (cured) as
well as in cured TpM803 cells stimulated to proliferate with recombinant IL-2 and TPA (cured + IL2/TPA), no signal was
obtained. Rehybridization of the stripped filter with bovine actin
cDNA as a probe resulted in specific signals for all samples (data not shown). These results demonstrate that the 11E cDNA clone is of
parasite origin and that the 11E gene is expressed in the schizont.
11E Is a Secretory Type Protein with Homology to Glutaredoxin
The 11E cDNA has a length of 574 nucleotides,
including a poly(A) tail of 49 nucleotides. The in vitro
translation product of 17 kDa can be assigned to an open reading frame
encoding a polypeptide of 151 residues starting at nucleotide 14. Other
open reading frames starting with an ATG codon are too short to encode a 17-kDa polypeptide. The deduced primary amino acid sequence, shown in
Fig. 4, contains an amino-terminal signal peptide for ER
translocation with a predicted cleavage site at cysteine 24 (11). The
calculated molecular masses of the primary product of 17,528 and 14,853 Da of the processed form agree well with the apparent molecular masses
of the cell-free translation products (see Fig. 1). Furthermore, when
the cDNA is expressed in E. coli, two forms
corresponding to the precursor product and the processed product are
observed (data not shown).
The sequence of the processed 11E polypeptide can be divided into two parts. First, the carboxyl-terminal segment spanning residues 51-151 shows significant homology to glutaredoxins, a family of thiol-active oxidoreductases (reviewed in Ref. 12). The highest homology was found to glutaredoxin from calf thymus (bovGlrx) (18). There was 37% identity over amino acids 51-151 of 11E. Nikkola and co-workers (44) have identified 29 highly conserved residues of glutaredoxins by sequence comparison. In the 11E sequence 15 of those are identical and 8 can be regarded as conservative changes (Fig. 4). Importantly, the active center motif Cys-Pro-Tyr-Cys is conserved in 11E. The two cysteines, assumed to form an intramolecular disulfide bridge in several mammalian family members, are absent in the 11E sequence like in the yeast glutaredoxin (16). Second, the amino-terminal region of processed 11E (residues 25-50) has no homology to described sequences and does not contain known sequence motifs.
Intracellular Processing and Expression of the 11E Protein in TpM803 CellsIn the cell-free expression system the 11E protein is processed by a signal peptidase to a 14-kDa form. If the same processing occurs in vivo the cellular protein and the cell-free expressed RM-processed form of 11E would have identical molecular weights. However, further modifications of 11E might occur in vivo. To test for signal peptide cleavage of the 11E protein in the schizont, its electrophoretic mobility in SDS-PAGE was compared with its in vitro synthesized, processed form (Fig. 5). 11E was translated in vitro both in the absence (not shown) and in the presence of RM. In the presence of microsomes the 17-kDa precursor was partially processed to the 14-kDa form (lane 1). An aliquot of the translation assay with RM, shown in lane 1, was treated with PK. The 17-kDa precursor form was digested, whereas the 14-kDa form was protected by microsomes (lane 2). To an aliquot of the translation assay with RM, which had been posttranslationally treated with PK (lane 2), detergent buffer was added to solubilize the microsomes. The detergent lysate was split and used for immunoprecipitation. The 14-kDa form could be specifically immunoprecipitated with antiserum 27, but not with the preimmune serum (lanes 3 and 4). Likewise, 11E antigen was immunoprecipitated with antiserum 27 from detergent lysates of metabolically labeled TpM803 cells (lane 6). The in vitro synthesized RM-processed 14-kDa form and the 11E antigen from schizont-infected cells had identical electrophoretic mobility (compare lanes 4 and 6). These results demonstrate that the 11E protein is proteolytically processed, most likely by a signal peptidase.
To corroborate the specificity of antiserum 27 we performed immunoblots
using lysates of infected and cured TpM803 cells (Fig. 6). Three antigens with apparent molecular masses of 28, 14, and 10 kDa were specifically recognized by the immune serum (strip 2). The 14-kDa antigen corresponds well to the processed form synthesized in vitro and the antigen found in infected
cells. The 10-kDa antigen is likely to be a degradation product rather than that generated by specific proteolytic processing, because it was
observed in some experiments only. To determine whether the 28-kDa
antigen represents a modified form of the 11E gene product, we depleted
antiserum 27 of binding activities to antigens other than the 14-kDa
antigen by sequential immunoadsorption (see "Materials and
Methods"). The depleted antiserum fraction no longer recognized the
28-kDa antigen, but still reacted with the 14- and the 10-kDa antigens
(strip 3), further supporting the assumption that the 10-kDa form is
derived from the 14-kDa form. The loss of binding to the 28-kDa antigen
indicates that it is not an unreduced 14-kDa homodimer and that
recognition is due to cross-reactivity to another T. parva
protein. Samples cured of the parasite showed that the expression of
28-, 14-, and 10-kDa antigens is specific for TpM803 cells (strips 4 and 5).
Subcellular Localization of the 11E Protein
To localize the
secretory type protein 11E within the parasite-host cell system, we
performed indirect immunofluorescence staining on formaldehyde-fixed,
permeabilized TpM803 cells. As the primary antibody a 14-kDa
antigen-specific preparation of antiserum 27 was used (compare with
Western analysis, Fig. 6). This preparation reacted specifically with
distinct subcellular regions of TpM803 cells (Fig.
7A). Double labeling with the DNA binding dye
Hoechst 33258 revealed that the immunolabeled clusters always lay in
the region of infected cells where the nuclei of the multinucleate
schizonts localized (Fig. 7C). When cured TpM803 cells were
analyzed we observed no region-specific immunostaining (Fig.
7B). Double labeling with Hoechst 33258 was used to confirm the loss of the parasite (Fig. 7D). Preimmune serum was used
as a control and resulted in nonspecific background staining in
infected and cured cells (data not shown).
It was not possible to deduce a clear subcellular localization from the
immunofluorescence data. Therefore we analyzed the 11E antigen
distribution by immuno-electron microscopy. Ultra-thin sections of
TpM803 cells were fixed with glutaraldehyde/picric acid, embedded in
Lowicryl HM 20, and labeled with depleted antiserum 27. Detection was
with 5-nm gold particle-labeled secondary antibody and silver
enhancement. Fig. 8A shows an overview of an
infected cell in which the boundary of the schizont (S) can
be clearly seen. Fig. 8B is taken from the same specimen and
shows part of the schizont (upper right in A) at
higher magnification. Specific labeling was observed only within the
schizont, frequently at membranous structures, including the parasite
surface. These membranous structures could not be ascribed to defined
subcellular compartments, because the schizont lacks clear
ultrastructural organization recognizable by electron microscopy
(45).
Taken together these data show that the 11E protein is localized in the schizont and is partially associated with intracellular and surface membranes.
Since the intracellular schizont stage of T. parva induces and maintains the proliferative phenotype of infected lymphocytes, and since it can only be prepared in a form suitable for mRNA isolation but not for analysis of exported proteins, we developed a novel approach to identify secretory and surface proteins. The screening strategy is based on the fact that the entry step of eucaryotic proteins into the secretory transport route, namely the translocation across the membrane of the ER, can be reconstituted and assayed in heterologous, cell-free, coupled translation-translocation systems. This procedure is not limited to our experimental system and may also be useful to identify secretory and surface proteins of other obligate intracellular pathogens or other systems where cells of interest cannot be propagated. Inherent in the technique is the selectivity for full-length cDNA clones since, except for some classes of transmembrane proteins, the signal sequence for ER translocation is in nearly all cases at the extreme amino terminus. However, there is the possibility that incomplete cDNA clones start with an internal transmembrane region that can mimic a functional signal sequence (46). There is a potential for false positives due to incomplete cDNA clones carrying cryptic signal sequences (47). This implies that for any protein identified by this screening procedure, its subcellular localization remains to be determined. So far we have analyzed 600 cDNA clones and obtained two candidates, which unequivocally fulfil the criterion of being translocated across microsomal membranes.
We have shown here that the 11E signal sequence is functional and cleaved off in a heterologous cell free system. Second, we have also demonstrated that the schizont expresses a processed 11E protein, which together with the subcellular localization data led us to conclude that the signal sequence operates as topogenic signal in the schizont.
This study on the 11E protein provides direct evidence for the first time that in T. parva the classical secretory pathway is operating, as has been shown for other intracellular protozoans (Trypanosoma brucei (8); Plasmodium lophurae (9); Plasmodium falciparum (10); for review, Toxoplasma gondii (48) and references therein). Our biochemical evidence for a functional ER is important, since with microscopical techniques an ER-like structure is not detectable in the schizont stage, except when it differentiates at the beginning of merogony (45).
To date the reported glutaredoxin family members lack intracellular transport signals and reside in the cytoplasm. 11E is the first glutaredoxin-like protein described to enter the secretory transport pathway. Interestingly, the T. parva homologue of the catalytic subunit of casein kinase II appears to represent a similar case. In cells of other organisms the enzyme is usually found in the cytoplasm and nucleus. The cloned T. parva casein kinase II homologue is also preceeded by a consensus signal peptide for ER translocation and an intervening sequence without homology to described proteins (49). It appears to be an attractive hypothesis that the schizont uses its secretory pathway to position parasite proteins in the host cell, which then can modulate the host cell physiology.
Various, partially overlapping, cellular functions have been ascribed to glutaredoxins and other members of the oxidoreductase superfamily they belong to (12, 25-28). It has to be shown whether the 11E protein has any of the described glutaredoxin or other oxidoreductase activities.
Other members belonging to the thiol active oxidoreductase superfamily exist, which are exported. In Gram-negative bacteria, some family members are either integral membrane proteins or bound to the periplasmic face of the inner membrane as part of an oligomeric protein complex (for review, see Ref. 50). Based on the localization of 11E protein, in close vicinity to membranous structures, it is conceivable that 11E protein participates in a membrane protein complex of the schizont. One would expect 11E to be exposed at the extracellular side of the schizont plasma membrane exerting its enzymatic activity toward the host cell cytoplasm.
Adult T-cell leukaemia-derived factor is a protein with more than 90% homology to human thioredoxin. It shows oxidoreductase activity and is secreted by a yet unknown mechanism. It has been shown to induce IL-2 receptor/tac antigen expression and to be involved in lymphocyte immortalization by human T-cell lymphotrophic virus, type I and Epstein-Barr virus (29, 30, 51). Increased tac antigen expression is essential for continuous proliferation of T. parva-infected bovine lymphocytes (52). It is tempting to speculate that 11E might play a crucial role in the induction of IL-2 receptor expression in TpM803 cells.
The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBankTM/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) U48417[GenBank] (clone 11E).
We are grateful to Coopers Animal Health Ltd., UK, for providing us with BW720c. We thank Dr R. deMartin for critical reading of the manuscript and helpful comments. For immunization of rabbits and serum collection, we thank M. Zsak.