Abstract

Lipid flipping in the membrane bilayers is a widespread eukaryotic phenomenon that is catalyzed by assorted P4-ATPases. Its occurrence, mechanism, and importance in apicomplexan parasites have remained elusive, however. Here we show that Toxoplasma gondii, an obligate intracellular parasite with high clinical relevance, can salvage phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PtdEtn) but not phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) probes from its milieu. Consistently, the drug analogs of PtdCho are broadly ineffective in the parasite culture. NBD-PtdSer imported to the parasite interior is decarboxylated to NBD-PtdEtn, while the latter is not methylated to yield PtdCho, which confirms the expression of PtdSer decarboxylase but a lack of PtdEtn methyltransferase activity and suggests a role of exogenous lipids in membrane biogenesis of T. gondii. Flow cytometric quantitation of NBD-probes endorsed the selectivity of phospholipid transport and revealed a dependence of the process on energy and protein. Accordingly, our further work identified five P4-ATPases (TgP4-ATPase1-5), all of which harbor the signature residues and motifs required for phospholipid flipping. Of the four proteins expressed during the lytic cycle, TgP4-ATPase1 is present in the apical plasmalemma; TgP4-ATPase3 resides in the Golgi network along with its noncatalytic partner Ligand Effector Module 3 (TgLem3), whereas TgP4-ATPase2 and TgP4-ATPase5 localize in the plasmalemma as well as endo/cytomembranes. Last but not least, auxin-induced degradation of TgP4-ATPase1-3 impaired the parasite growth in human host cells, disclosing their crucial roles during acute infection. In conclusion, we show selective translocation of PtdEtn and PtdSer at the parasite surface and provide the underlying mechanistic and physiological insights in a model eukaryotic pathogen.

Highlights

  • Ability to infect, reproduce, and persist in almost all homeothermic organisms including humans

  • The parasite dwells in a parasitophorous vacuole (PV) that is originally derived from the host plasma membrane but profoundly modified to enable its asexual reproduction by endodyogeny [3, 4]

  • Subsequent immunostaining of the inner membrane complex (IMC) (TgGap45) and PM (TgSag2) marker proteins suggested the presence of TgP4-ATPase1-2/5 in the plasma membrane (Fig. 5A)

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Summary

Introduction

Ability to infect, reproduce, and persist in almost all homeothermic organisms including humans. P4-ATPase-mediated PtdSer and PtdEtn import in T. gondii presence of ATP-dependent PtdSer and PtdEtn transporter proteins in the plasma membrane of tachyzoites. To examine the expression and subcellular location of TgP4-ATPases in tachyzoites of T. gondii, we first performed single crossover-mediated genomic tagging with a C-terminal hemagglutinin (HA) tag (Fig. S5A).

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