1 PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Corporation, 4-1-8 Honcho Kawaguchi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan
2 Sumitomo Chemical, 4-2-1 Takatsukasa, Takarazuka, Hyogo 665-0051, Japan
3 Department of Molecular Protozoology, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, 3-1 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan
4 Department of Biomedical Chemistry, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyou-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan
5 Department of Molecular Parasitology, Ehime University School of Medicine, Shigenobu-cho, Ehime 791-0295, Japan
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: mitamura{at}biken.osaka-u.ac.jp)
Accepted 13 November 2003
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Summary |
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Key words: Malaria, Nile Red, Neutral lipid, Acyl-CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase, Brefeldin A, Fatty acid
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Introduction |
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Triacylglycerol (TAG), which is usually found as concentrated cytoplasmic lipid droplets or oil bodies (Murphy and Vance, 1999), serves as highly reduced stores of oxidizable energy in most cells and is deemed essential for intracellular energy metabolism and homeostasis (Bell and Coleman, 1980
). TAG and its biosynthesis have also been implicated in several important biological processes, including: in prokaryotes, yeasts and plants, as regulators of fatty acid (FA) composition of membrane lipids, as a FA source for biosynthesis of phospholipids (PLs), and as agents for remobilization of membrane lipids during senescence (Murphy, 1993
; Dahlqvist et al., 2000
; Alvarez and Steinbüchel, 2002
); in mammals, for milk production and thermogenesis (Murphy and Vance, 1999
); and, in humans, as a common element to cause some of the most prevalent diseases of the western world, hypertriglyceridemia, diabetes and obesity (Naderali et al., 2001
). Recently, the identification of lipid bodies in Toxoplasma (Charron and Sibley, 2002
) and of TAG-associated intracellular lipophilic inclusions in the sputum samples of patients infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Garton et al., 2002
) have been reported, suggesting that TAG and its biosynthesis might also have possible roles in establishing parasite infection in a host and a possible role in pathogenesis of infectious diseases. The correlation between specific bacterial or parasitic infections and lipid body formation also suggests that they might be markers of pathological changes.
The sn-glycerol-3-phosphate pathway (also called the Kennedy pathway) has been suggested to be the major route for de novo TAG biosynthesis in all TAG-accumulating organisms (Lehner and Kuksis, 1996). This pathway involves the stepwise acylation of sn-glycerol-3-phosphate and/or dihydroxyacetone phosphate to phosphatidic acid. Phosphatidic acid is then hydrolysed to sn-1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG). These steps are shared with the glycerophospholipid (GPL) biosynthesis. The enzyme that catalyses the final and rate-limiting step, involving the transfer of the acyl group from acyl-CoA to the sn-3 position of sn-1, 2-DAG to form TAG, is acyl-CoA:DAG acyltransferase (DGAT) (Bell and Coleman, 1980
; Lehner and Kuksis, 1996
). To date, two DGAT families, designated as DGAT1 and DGAT2 (which exhibit no sequence homologies to each other), have been identified in animals, fungi and plants (Cases et al., 1998
; Oelkers et al., 1998
; Cases et al., 2001
; Lardizabal et al., 2001
). In addition, a new type of DGAT, the bifunctional wax ester synthase/DGAT, has been identified in some Gram-negative bacteria, several Mycobacterium and Arabidopsis thaliana (Kalscheuer and Steinbüchel, 2003
). Recently, the contribution of DGAT to mammalian TAG metabolism and its involvement in diet-induced obesity have been demonstrated using DGAT1-deficient mice (Smith et al., 2000
).
The importance of TAG metabolism and its involvement in lipid homeostasis in eukaryotes and some human diseases has been well recognized. However, the implications for infectious diseases are just being discerned. In Plasmodium parasites, which are etiological agents for malaria, the biological significance of TAG and its metabolism is, moreover, an intriguing issue because plasmodial parasites are believed to possess little or no capacity for the oxidative degradation of FAs (e.g. ß-oxidation) (Holz, 1977), although increased TAG levels have been reported in the mature forms of parasites grown in vivo and in vitro (Beach et al., 1977
; Vial et al., 1982a
; Vial et al., 1982b
). Thus, we infer that Plasmodium cells use TAG for other means than as an energy source during intraerythrocytic growth. To test this theory, we performed detail characterization of TAG metabolism and trafficking through metabolic labeling, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy (EM), and enzyme activity assay.
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Materials and Methods |
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Parasite culture
The P. falciparum parasite lines used are Honduras-1 (Mitamura et al., 2000), 3D7 and Dd2 (Hanada et al., 2002
). Parasite cells were routinely maintained as described (Hanada et al., 2000
; Mitamura et al., 2000
). Tightly synchronized cultures within a 4-hour life span were prepared for all analyses (initial parasitemia,
0.5%; hematocrit, 3%) (Mitamura et al., 2000
). The media used were: basal medium (Mitamura et al., 2000
), standard medium (basal medium supplemented with 10% human serum) and serum-free medium (basal medium with 30 µM each of palmitic and oleic acids reconstituted in 60 µM LFBSA).
Parasite cultures were verified free from mycoplasma contamination using 1 ml culture for a nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with the primer sets provided in the Mycoplasma Detection Kit Version 2.0 (ATCC bioproduct; 90-1001K).
Metabolic labeling experiments
To measure the incorporation of radiolabeled FA into various lipid species, 5 ml tightly synchronized cultures of Honduras-1 were labeled in serum-free medium containing [14C]-oleic acid (specific activity 8.3 mCi mmol-1), with medium change every 12 hours. At various times, cultures were harvested thoroughly with 9 ml chilled basal medium. The precipitated erythrocytes were back-extracted for 5 minutes on ice with 9 ml solution A (basal medium supplemented with 60 µM LFBSA), followed by washing with 9 ml each of chilled solution A and basal medium. Pelleted cells were disrupted by mixing with 0.65 ml chilled deionized water using a vortex mixer. Finally, total lipids were extracted according to Bligh and Dyer (Bligh and Dyer, 1959), aliquoted and kept at 4°C until use.
For pulse-chase experiments, tightly synchronized cultures of Honduras-1 were incubated in serum-free medium, freshly changed every 12 hours. After 30 hours incubation, cultures were harvested thoroughly with an equal volume of solution A and the precipitated erythrocytes were washed once with solution A. The cells were then labeled for 4 hours in the labeling medium described above (specific activity of [14C]-oleic acid, 16.6 mCi mmol-1). After labeling, 5 ml cultures were harvested completely by washing with 9 ml chilled basal medium and the erythrocytes precipitated were back-extracted for 5 minutes on ice with 10 ml solution A, followed by washing twice in the same solution (10 ml). The labeled cells were chased for 20 hours in a basal medium supplemented with 60 µM IBSA without medium change. Every 4 hours after chasing, erythrocytes and culture supernatant were collected separately. All cells harvested from 5 ml culture were washed once with 9 ml chilled basal medium and then subjected to lipid extraction as described above, while the collected culture supernatant was directly used for lipid extraction.
Extracted lipid species were separated on silica gel 60 TLC plates using solvent systems of hexane/diethylether/acetic acid (70:30:1, v/v/v) and of chloroform/methanol/acetic acid (65:25:10, v/v/v) for neutral and polar lipids, respectively. Radioactive lipid species were detected with BAS1500 image analyser (Fuji Photo Film, Japan) and their identities determined by co-migration with standard lipids. Each assigned lipid species was scraped from the TLC plate, extracted and its radioactivity measured using a liquid scintillation counter (Beckman LS6500). The incorporation value of each lipid species associated with infected erythrocyte sample was corrected against the corresponding value in uninfected erythrocyte that had been treated identically, which was used to monitor the erythrocyte capacity to incorporate the serum-derived FA into various lipid species. In the pulse-chase experiment, total radioactivity recovered in the neutral lipid fraction from cell and medium at each sampling time were comparable based on densitometry analysis [average value of the arbitrary unit was 15.488 (s.d. 1.774)]. In both experiments, the proportions of parasitized erythrocytes and parasite development were monitored microscopically using Giemsa-stained thin smears.
Measurement of neutral lipid content
Tightly synchronized cultures of Honduras-1 grown in standard medium were enriched to 92-98% mature forms by Percoll gradient. Pelleted cells were back-extracted twice in 10 ml solution A and washed twice in 10 ml basal medium before lipid extraction as described above. Extracted lipids were dissolved in 1 ml chloroform, 100 µl aliquot was used for quantification of phosphate and the rest was dried before resuspension in 20 µl chloroform for TLC analysis to quantify the neutral lipid species. Uninfected erythrocytes, treated similarly, were used for controls.
For phosphate quantification, the chloroform solution was dried, resuspended in 5 ml distilled water and 1 ml of potassium peroxodisulfate solution (0.04 g ml-1), and autoclaved at 120°C for 30 minutes. To the supernatant (2.5 ml), 200 µl of developing solution {5:1 solution, v/v, of 1.44 mM bis-[(+)-tartrato]diantimonate[III] dipotassium trihydrate in 19.42 mM hexammonium heptamolybdate tetrahydrate: 0.409 M ascorbic acid} was added and allowed to stand for 15 minutes at 30°C. After reading the absorbance at 880 nm, the phosphate amount for every sample was determined using the potassium dihydrogenphosphate standard curve (phosphate amount, 0-5 µg; linear regression coefficient, 0.9991). The PL content was calculated based on one phosphate molecule for each PL species.
For quantification of neutral lipids, one-half or one-tenth of the chloroform solution prepared for TLC analysis was developed in silica gel 60 HPTLC plates using diethylether/petroleum ether/acetic acid (30:170:2, v/v/v). The plates were sprayed with 50% sulfate solution in methanol (v/v), baked for 15 minutes at 180°C and scanned with Multi Reader 1200U (NEC, Japan). The position of each lipid species were assigned using the corresponding standards and the intensity of each spot were measured with Image Master 1D Elite version 300 (Amersham Biosciences). Lipid species was quantified using the standard curves for each neutral lipid species drawn with sequential serial dilutions of a standard mixture. The linear regression coefficient of Cho (1-20 µg), cholesteryl ester (CE; 0.8-8 µg), TAG (0.8-8 µg), DAG (0.8-8 µg) and free FA (FFA; 0.8-8 µg) were 0.97. The molecular masses of cholesteryl oleate (651), triolein (885), diolein (621) and oleic acid (283) were used to express lipid content as micromoles.
Immunofluorescence microscopy
Aliquots of tightly synchronized cultures of Dd2, 3D7 and Honduras-1 grown in standard medium were taken at different intervals within 52 hours to monitor the changes in the staining pattern of Nile Red and Bodipy 483/503 relative to intraerythrocytic development. Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503 staining were carried out essentially as described (Greenspan et al., 1985; Gocze and Freeman, 1994
). Cells were washed twice with PBS, incubated in the dark for 5-10 minutes in Hank's balanced salt solution (Invitrogen/GIBCO, Japan) with 1 µg ml-1 Nile Red in acetone or for 20 minutes with 10 µg ml-1 Bodipy 493/503 in ethanol; washed twice with Hank's balanced salt solution and stained with DAPI at 1 µg ml-1 for 30 minutes. Cells were imaged using either a Zeiss fluorescence microscope (Axioskop) equipped with Axiocam CCD camera or an Axioplan-2 equipped with Zeiss Pascal LSM5 laser scanning module (Carl Zeiss, Japan) both with a 100x plan apochromatic oil immersion objective (NA 1.4). Fluorescent images were acquired at identical exposure settings of 13-20 seconds with pixel values of less than 255. Line averaging using the mean of four top-to-bottom scan was used for confocal imaging. Brightfield and fluorescent images were processed using the Zeiss AxioVision or the LSM5 Pascal software with 8-bit grayscale images, the background of which were adjusted before import into Adobe Photoshop for final arrangement.
For Sudan III staining, parasites fixed in 3.7% paraformaldehyde was dropped onto uncoated, precleaned glass slides, air dried, washed three times in PBS and flooded with a working solution of Sudan III (Fukumoto and Fujimoto, 2002) for 30 minutes. Hereafter, slides were extensively washed in PBS and counterstained with DAPI before mounting using Permafluor (ImmunonTM). For double staining of lipid body and SERA, fixed cells were dropped onto polylysine-coated coverslips, air dried and washed three times in PBS. After 15 minutes of quenching in 50 mM ammonium chloride in PBS, cells were permeabilized in 0.05% saponin for 30 minutes and blocked with 5% BSA in solution B (PBS containing 0.1% Triton-X 100). Smears were probed with a rabbit anti-SERA antibody (Ab) and an FITC-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG Ab. Following 15 minutes washing with solution B, glass slides were processed for Sudan III staining as above.
Electron microscopy
Tightly synchronized cultures of Dd2 were fixed on ice for 2 hours in 2.5% (v/v) glutaraldehyde buffered at pH 7.3 in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate. Cells were washed three times in cacodylate buffer, post-fixed for 1 hour in 1% (w/v) osmium tetroxide in cacodylate buffer and rinsed in distilled water. The cells were dehydrated in an ethanol series and propylene oxide before embedding in the epoxy resin Glycidether 100 (Boehringer Ingelheim Bioproducts, Germany). Sections were sequentially stained with 2% uranyl acetate in 50% methanol and Reynolds' lead citrate before viewing in a JEM-1230 transmission electron microscope (JEOL, Japan). At least 100 sections were observed in various stages analysed.
Effect of brefeldin A and trifluoperazine treatment
For BFA treatment, BFA (5 µg ml-1) or ethanol (0.1%) was added to cultures of 4-hour-old rings up to 26 hours or 30 hours. After BFA incubation at the indicated times, parasite cells were either smeared onto glass slides, stained with Nile Red or Bodipy 493/503, or washed and re-cultured in standard medium for another 6-8 hours to ensure the viability of cells after treatment.
For TFP treatment, TFP (100 µM or 500 µM) or ethanol (0.1%) was added to tightly synchronized cultures at 30 hours (mature trophozoite stage). 3 hours after incubation, parasite cells were processed as above.
DGAT activity assay
Cell lysate as an enzyme source was prepared from uninfected and P. falciparum-infected erythrocyte ghosts, as well as parasite cells isolated from parasitized erythrocyte by saponin treatment as described (Hanada et al., 2000) except that cells were disrupted by one-time freeze-thawing instead of sonication. When indicated, isolated parasite cells prepared by saponin treatment were disrupted through N2 cavitation method with a 4639 cell disruption bomb from Parr Instrument (IL, USA) (Takashima et al., 2001
) and stored at -80°C until use. The DGAT activity assay was performed as described (Coleman and Bell, 1976
) with slight modifications. The reaction mixture was formulated in a total volume of 150 µl containing the indicated amount of lysate, 0.5 mM 1,2-sn-dioleoylglycerol, 30 µM [14C]-palmitoyl-coenzyme-A (specific activity 5 mCi mmol-1 or 13.75 mCi mmol-1), 0.25 M sucrose, 1 mM EDTA, 1.8 µM LFBSA, 0-100 mM MgCl2 and 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5). The enzyme reaction was started with the addition of the lysate and the assay mixture incubated for 10 minutes at ambient temperature before the reaction was terminated by adding 0.3 ml of heptane-isopropanol-H2O solution (80:20:2, v/v/v). The lipid fraction was recovered from heptane phase after addition of 0.2 ml heptane and 0.1 ml water, dried using a vacuum concentrator, and dissolved into chloroform-methanol (1:2, v/v). The lipid species obtained were separated on silica gel 60 TLC plates using solvent systems of hexane/diethylether/acetic acid (75:25:1, v/v/v). The total amount of TAG produced was calculated by the radioactivity of the TAG spot and the final specific activity of [14C]-palmitoyl-CoA used in each reaction. The radioactivity of each TAG spot was quantified by BAS2500 image analyzer (Fuji Photo Film, Japan), using the intensity of the authentic [14C]-palmitoyl-CoA run in the same TLC plate as standard. A linearity of signal intensities from the different radioactivity of authentic controls was verified from 11 pCi to 11 nCi. Protein concentrations were determined by Bradford method using the Protein Assay Kit (Nippon BioRad Laboratories, Japan).
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Results |
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Incorporation of [14C]-oleic acid into TAG is more stage dependent than those into PC and PE. The accumulation of TAG increased sharply from 26 hours to 38 hours, corresponding to mature trophozoite to schizont stages, after a slow lag period in the early developmental stages from 10 hours to 26 hours (ring to young trophozoite), whereas a steady increase in PC and PE were observed (Fig. 1B). TAG accumulation also differs from that of glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs), which has been shown to occur almost exclusively from early to late trophozoites, with little to none from trophozoite to schizont (Naik et al., 2000). The difference between apparent kinetics of TAG accumulation and those of PC, PE and GPIs suggests that TAG metabolism might have important implications in the later stages of the intraerythrocytic development of parasite cells.
Incorporation levels into TAG by schizont (at 38 hours) was about 150-fold higher than in ring, about three times lower and higher than PC and PE, respectively (Fig. 1B). The increase in TAG synthesis at mature stages was also observed previously using in vitro P. falciparum cultures and [3H]-palmitate, although the exact stage of the parasite was not precisely defined (Vial et al., 1982a). Aside from TAG, 1,2-DAG and 1,3-DAG were also recovered throughout development (Fig. 1A), indicating that parasite cells have a pool of DAG, a key metabolite for both TAG and GPL biosyntheses.
The rate of degradation of 14C-labeled neutral lipid associated with infected erythrocytes during the later stages in the intraerythrocytic cycle (from mature trophozoite, schizont, segmented schizont, schizont rupture, merozoite release and merozoite invasion into new uninfected erythrocyte) was determined by pulse-chase experiment. 4 hours after transfer to the chasing medium, almost 50% of cell-associated TAG was already degraded and, from 8 hours, as much as 75% (Fig. 2B). The loss of the labeled FA by the parasite is not caused by TAG excretion to the medium as we can detect only trace amount of TAG released (Fig. 2A,B). However, a significant amount of the label recovered from the medium was associated with FFA, indicating that the accumulated cellular TAG was degraded into FFA and the consequent product was released. The radioactivity associated with FFA in the medium increased linearly from 0 hours to 8 hours during the chase corresponding to the period from schizont to schizont rupture (Fig. 2B). From 12 hours to 20 hours, when merozoites start to invade new erythrocytes, enter the second cycle and develop into new rings, radioactivity associated in the FFA released to the medium reached a plateau in parallel to the observed decrease of radioactivity associated in cellular TAG (Fig. 2B). The good inverse correlation between cellular TAG degradation and release of FFA into the medium implies the existence of lipase and also probably phospholipase activities associated with the intraerythrocytic P. falciparum. To support this implication, the presence of various phospholipases in Plasmodium has been suggested (Vial and Ancelin, 1998) and a candidate gene for TAG lipase, the amino acid sequence of which showed significant homology to yeast TAG lipase (Athenstaedt et al., 1999
), could be found in the Plasmodium database, PlasmoDB (http://plasmodb.org/).
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Composition and distribution of neutral lipid species in infected erythrocytes
To determine the extent to which the observed TAG metabolism affects the total lipid content in P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes, we measured the amounts of neutral and polar lipids in both mature trophozoite and schizont-rich cultures grown in standard medium. As shown in Table 1, the lipid content of mature stage parasitized erythrocyte agrees with that reported previously (Holz, 1977; Hsiao et al., 1991
; Vial and Ancelin, 1998
). PLs accumulated during parasite maturation accounts for 65-70% of the total lipids associated with infected erythrocyte. By contrast, with uninfected erythrocytes, the major lipids Cho and PLs account for about 50% each, with the other neutral lipids CE, TAG, DAG and FFA being barely detectable. In mature-stage parasitized erythrocytes, TAG contributed significantly to neutral lipid content. Collectively, the pattern of metabolites observed resulting from [14C]-oleic acid labeling reflects the lipid distribution in infected erythrocytes grown in standard medium, although DAG and FFA could not be significantly detected under our assay conditions. The substantial increase of TAG content in segmented schizont-infected erythrocytes grown in standard medium (akin to physiological condition) compared with other neutral lipids further suggests that TAG metabolism is functional and might play some roles at the later stages of the intraerythrocytic development. Another noticeable feature with respect to the neutral lipid is the amount of Cho associated with infected erythrocytes, consistent with previous findings that Cho accumulation appears to be important to maintain intraerythrocytic proliferation (Lauer et al., 2000
). The observed changes of Cho level between mature trophozoite and schizont stage parasitized erythrocytes have also been reported (Maguire and Sherman, 1990
).
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The levels of DAG obtained from mature-stage infected erythrocytes grown in standard medium was lower than we expected from metabolic labeling studies. Growth in serum-free medium might enhance some biosynthetic and/or degradation pathways contributing to accumulate DAG, or make certain steps in lipid metabolism become limiting, resulting into the accumulation of intermediate metabolites. The accumulation of FFA also supports this assumption.
Visualization of lipid bodies in P. falciparum-infected erythrocyte
In eukaryotes, stored neutral lipids accumulate as cellular lipid droplets that can be stained by the lipid body markers, Nile Red (Greenspan et al., 1985), Bodipy 493/503 (Gocze and Freeman, 1994
) and Sudan III (Fukumoto and Fujimoto, 2002
). As shown in Fig. 3I-II, Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503 stained small discrete bodies highly variable in size and number in P. falciparum-infected erythrocyte as parasite cells undergo various stages of their intraerythrocytic development. No characteristic staining pattern was observed in uninfected erythrocytes (data not shown), indicating the specific staining of lipid bodies in parasitized erythrocytes. The relative abundance and localization of lipid bodies are stage dependent. At the ring stage, fluorescence was barely detectable (Fig. 3I-II,A) but the number of cytoplasmic fluorescent droplets increased from late trophozoite with maximum abundance at schizont stage (Fig. 3I-II,C-E). When visualized together with DAPI, most fluorescent signals are close to the nucleus at the early stages of the intraerythrocytic cycle (i.e. ring to trophozoite stage) (Fig. 3I-II,A,B) but, as development proceeds, the staining patterns from both fluorescent probes became discrete. Not all lipid bodies completely overlapped with parasite nuclei as stained with DAPI and, in some instances, Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503 staining appeared to be dispersed within the parasitized erythrocyte (Fig. 3I-II,C-E), suggesting that lipid bodies are exported at the later stages. In segmented schizont, lipid bodies appears to be a `bunch of grapes' pattern of fluorescence surrounding each nuclei, apart from some distinct, brightly homogenous fluorescence signals adjacent to them (Fig. 3I-II,E). Free merozoites observed just upon the rapture of segmented schizonts still showed the delineating pattern of fluorescence (Fig. 3I,F), whereas no merozoite released completely from the erythrocyte showed any strong fluorescence signals around cells (Fig. 3I,G), suggesting that the surrounding lipid bodies in the merozoites are degraded upon merozoite release from parasitized erythrocyte. Using 3D7 and Honduras-1, essentially the same staining pattern to that with Dd2 was observed (data not shown), indicating that the phenomena on lipid body formation and their trafficking within parasitized erythrocyte are general in P. falciparum.
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The prominent staining of lipid bodies by Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503 opens the possibility that such structures can be observed by EM. Representative images in Fig. 4 show a distinct oval translucent structure in both mature trophozoite (A) and early shizont (B). At schizont stage, consistent with Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503 staining (Fig. 3I-II,C,D), two distinct structures were observed, although no more than four structures could be seen in sections so far examined. These distinct structures are similar not only to the one demonstrated in Toxoplasma (Charron and Sibley, 2002) but also to the cytoplasmic lipid droplets and/or lipid bodies purified from mammalian, yeast and fungal cells (Clausen et al., 1974
; Dylewski et al., 1984
; Kamisaka et al., 1999
; Fujimoto et al., 2001
). However, no such structures could be found in the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) from schizont and segmented schizont sections.
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To substantiate, if indeed, that some lipid bodies are exported to the PV, co-localization study with a known PV-associated protein, SERA (Pang et al., 1999) was undertaken. Owing to the broad emission profile of Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503, we used Sudan III to stain lipid bodies. As shown in Fig. 5A, Sudan III gave the characteristic lipid body staining pattern as observed in Fig. 3, and the regions stained by Sudan III in schizont and segmented schizont appear to lie within the area defined by SERA, suggesting the localization of lipid bodies in the PV. Confocal microscopy, however, indicate only a partial overlap between the subcellular location of lipid bodies and SERA as examined at various slices. Although regions of partial overlap (yellow areas) are prominent in the first and central slice in schizont (Fig. 5Ba), a region of partial overlap can be observed only in the central slice in segmented schizont (Fig. 5Bb). This implies that lipid bodies show differential localization/subcompartmentation from SERA within the PV as well.
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Effect of BFA and trifluoperazine on the formation and trafficking of lipid bodies
To gain mechanistic insights into the export of lipid bodies to the cytosol of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes, we tested the effect of BFA, which has been shown to inhibit the transport and sorting of intracellular molecules through the parasites' endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (Elmendorf and Haldar, 1993; Benting et al., 1994
; Wiser et al., 1997
; Adisa et al., 2001
; Hayashi et al., 2001
; Wickham et al., 2001
). Tightly synchronized ring stage cultures treated with 5 µg ml-1 BFA for 26 hours or 30 hours were compared with control cultures treated with the carrier solvent, ethanol. In control samples at 26 hours and 30 hours, when the parasites develop into mature trophozoites, several cytoplasmic lipid droplets were localized randomly within the parasitized erythrocytes (Fig. 6Ab,Bb), as observed in Fig. 3I-II,C. Conversely, in BFA-treated samples, the number of lipid bodies was significantly reduced (Fig. 6Aa,Ba). The effect of BFA on lipid body formation and/or their trafficking in P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes is reversible: the treated parasites were viable and were able to continue development and lipid droplet accumulation after removal of BFA (Fig. 6C), as observed in other general secretion pathways. Although it was noted that development of the parasites was somewhat retarded by BFA treatment (approximately 4 hours delayed compared with the ethanol control, based on similar parasites as judged from DAPI and Giemsa staining), the effect on lipid body formation and their trafficking was still significant. The effect of BFA was also observed using Bodipy 493/503 (data not shown).
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Trifluoperazine (TFP), an amphiphilic cationic drug that modulates FA incorporation into TAG in fungal cells (Kamisaka et al., 1990) was added to tightly synchronized late-trophozoite stage cultures for 3 hours. Addition of TFP at 100 µM or 500 µM caused a concomitant decrease in Nile Red fluorescent lipid bodies (Fig. 7Aa,b) compared with the ethanol control (Fig. 7Ac). This effect was reversible, as evidenced by the resumption in intraerythrocytic development and lipid body accumulation when the cells were washed and recultured in standard medium (Fig. 7B). Thus, it appears that a de novo TAG biosynthetic pathway via phosphatidic acid contributes to lipid body formation in Plasmodium.
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DGAT activity associated with intraerythrocytic P. falciparum parasites
To obtain some information about the enzymes involved in the biosynthetic pathway for TAG in Plasmodium, we examined whether parasite cells retain DGAT activity using uninfected and infected erythrocyte ghost lysate as well as isolated parasite lysate as enzyme source. Infected erythrocyte ghost lysates showed significant activity compared with uninfected erythrocyte ghost lysates (Table 2), indicating that the observed DGAT activity is P. falciparum-infection dependent. The DGAT activity associated with infected erythrocyte ghost lysate is linear for at least 15 minutes and also directly proportional to the amounts of protein up to 50 µg (Fig. 8A,B). Unexpectedly, almost comparable activity could be detected in the reaction omitting DAG, one substrate for DGAT (Fig. 8A,B), a trend similarly observed using isolated parasite cell lysate as an enzyme source (data not shown). The high activity obtained without DAG is probably due to the assumption that freeze-thawing, which is known to disrupt membrane integrity, can release some of the free DAG associated with parasite cells, probably with the parasite membranes (Fig. 1B). Interestingly, when N2 cavitation was used to prepare the lysate from isolated parasites instead of freeze-thawing, the DAG dependency of DGAT activity became evident, although a slight but almost constant activity could still be detected in the absence of DAG (Fig. 8C). DGAT activity was highest at around 3 mM Mg2+ (Fig. 8C). When compared at different parasite stages, a higher DGAT activity was detected from trophozoite/schizont-rich culture (Table 2). These results imply that the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate pathway at least is used in the plasmodial parasite, mainly at the trophozoite and schizont stages, consistent with the results that TAG synthesis and lipid body formation were active at trophozoite and schizont stages (Fig. 1B, Fig. 3I-II,C-E) and lipid body formation was inhibited by TFP (Fig. 7Aa,b). In addition, because N2 cavitation is known to be among the mildest ways to maintain membrane integrity [e.g. in a study dealing with plasmodial mitochondria (Takashima et al., 2001)], these results suggest that the plasmodial DGAT enzyme and its substrate DAG are compartmentalized on parasite membranes.
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Discussion |
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Another possible role of lipid bodies in Plasmodium is, as suggested in another apicomplexan parasite, Toxoplasma (Charron and Sibley, 2002), to serve as a place to concentrate diverted host cell lipids for the biogenesis of parasite membranes and possibly as a place for lipid metabolism to occur during intraerythrocytic proliferation of parasite cells. This, however, seems less probable because the apparently high amount of lipid body present in parasite cells disappeared during merozoite release. That TAG supplies fatty acyl chains for the synthesis of GPLs as well as GPI also seems unlikely, because much more radioactivity is incorporated into these lipids than into TAG and the observed accumulation of TAG is clearly delayed compared with that observed in these lipids (Vial et al., 1982b
; Naik et al., 2002) (this study). The possibility that TAG in plasmodial cells serves as a reservoir for FAs, substrates for oxidative catabolism to generate high amount of ATP, is likewise improbable because, when assayed in our laboratory, the capacity for ß-oxidation of FA in P. falciparum, normalized with the activity of rat succinate dehydrogenase as a control, was at least 300-fold less (data not shown).
Microscopic observations of lipid bodies during the course of intraerythrocytic development of P. falciparum showed that a tiny fluorescent dot (<1 µm) at early ring stage appears to increase in size (2 µm) and number as development proceeded to later stages. These observations suggest that a tiny lipid body in the ring serves as a nucleus to mature into a bigger lipid body. Nile Red and Bodipy 493/503 fluorescence patterns that are close to the parasite nucleus as visualized by DAPI staining might also imply a close association with the ER (Murphy and Vance, 1999
). Similarly, the effect of BFA treatment on lipid body formation and/or secretion into the PV and the cytoplasm of parasitized erythrocyte suggest that lipid body formation occurs at the ER and is subsequently traffic through the Golgi to its final destination. This might imply the involvement of a classical secretion pathway for lipid body trafficking, although it is also likely that lipid bodies are associated with the cytoplasmic surface of the ER and develop as the parasite cell undergoes intraerythrocytic development. The involvement of the ER to lipid body formation and trafficking is consistent with the observations that ER membranes surround lipid bodies in Mortierella ramanniana (Kamisaka et al., 1999
), that the ER and lipid bodies found in other eukaryotes are in close contact (Murphy and Vance, 1999
) and that trafficking occurs in Toxoplasma lipid bodies using C4-BODIPY-C9 (Charron and Sibley, 2002
). Studies using BFA to demonstrate transport and/or movement of lipid bodies in other TAG accumulating cells is, however, noticeably absent from literature.
The `bunch of grapes' pattern of fluorescence surrounding each nucleus as it appeared in segmented schizont is intriguing, because this observation implies continuous fusion and a constant trafficking of lipid bodies to the PV, quite oppose to general observations that lipid bodies appear as distinct spherical droplets in the cytoplasm. A possible change in the physical structure and relative lipid composition of the lipid body, whether it appears as oval/round or coalescence forms, would have contributed to our inability to obtain the characteristic lipid body structure in the PV at the EM sections of schizont and segmented schizont. The unique fluorescence pattern might, however, reflect the assumed possible role of lipid bodies related to the membrane lysis described above. Spheroidal lipidic vacuoles, which appear at the periphery of the parasites at early schizonts and disappear at the onset of merozoite formation, have been observed in Plasmodium knowlesi schizonts by EM (Bannister and Mitchell, 1986). No further characterization, however, was made, and thus the identity of the structure observed in P. knowlesi and the Nile-Red-stained lipid body shown in this study remains unclear.
The results of our drug inhibition and enzyme activity assays also provide evidence for the existence of the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate pathway for de novo TAG biosynthesis. Although TFP can affect GPL synthesis and cause nonspecific cell damage (Kamisaka et al., 1990; Pillai et al., 2002
), we speculate that, in our assay system, TFP affected lipid body formation more specifically because, upon removal of the drug and incubation in standard medium, parasite cells were able to resume normal development and lipid body formation. The high activity of DGAT, the principal enzyme in the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate pathway for TAG synthesis, was observed in a stage-specific manner during the intraerythrocytic development. DGAT activity associated with the intraerythrocytic parasites showed low Mg2+ dependency, the profile of which is similar to the mammalian DGAT2 enzyme (Cases et al., 2001
); however, at higher Mg2+ concentrations, a significant activity could also be observed. This profile for Mg2+ dependency suggests the presence of a plasmodial DGAT1-like enzyme and as well as a DGAT2-like enzyme, although it is also possible that the plasmodial DGAT exhibits a peculiar Mg2+ dependency profile. A BLAST search in the P. falciparum genome revealed that there is only one candidate gene with significant homology to DGAT1, but no candidate gene for DGAT2. We therefore considered that this candidate gene might encode a plasmodial DGAT enzyme and are currently trying to express this gene in heterologous living organisms sufficient enough to characterize the enzymatic properties of the recombinant protein.
Finally, the findings demonstrated in this study could underscore unique features of Plasmodium parasites that might substantiate a novel biological significance of TAG, its metabolism, and trafficking in plasmodial parasites. The identification and investigation of the genes for TAG metabolism, as well as lipid body formation and trafficking would greatly facilitate studies on this interesting issue.
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