Abstract

The unusual cell cycles of Apicomplexa parasites are remarkably flexible with the ability to complete cytokinesis and karyokinesis coordinately or postpone cytokinesis for several rounds of chromosome replication, and are well recognized. Despite this surprising biology, the molecular machinery required to achieve this flexibility is largely unknown. In this study, we provide comprehensive experimental evidence that apicomplexan parasites utilize multiple Cdk-related kinases (Crks) to coordinate cell division. We determined that Toxoplasma gondii encodes seven atypical P-, H-, Y- and L- type cyclins and ten Crks to regulate cellular processes. We generated and analyzed conditional tet-OFF mutants for seven TgCrks and four TgCyclins that are expressed in the tachyzoite stage. These experiments demonstrated that TgCrk1, TgCrk2, TgCrk4 and TgCrk6, were required or essential for tachyzoite growth revealing a remarkable number of Crk factors that are necessary for parasite replication. G1 phase arrest resulted from the loss of cytoplasmic TgCrk2 that interacted with a P-type cyclin demonstrating that an atypical mechanism controls half the T. gondii cell cycle. We showed that T. gondii employs at least three TgCrks to complete mitosis. Novel kinases, TgCrk6 and TgCrk4 were required for spindle function and centrosome duplication, respectively, while TgCrk1 and its partner TgCycL were essential for daughter bud assembly. Intriguingly, mitotic kinases TgCrk4 and TgCrk6 did not interact with any cyclin tested and were instead dynamically expressed during mitosis indicating they may not require a cyclin timing mechanism. Altogether, our findings demonstrate that apicomplexan parasites utilize distinctive and complex mechanisms to coordinate their novel replicative cycles.

Highlights

  • Obligate intracellular parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa are responsible for many important diseases in humans and animals, including malaria, toxoplasmosis and cryptosporidiosis

  • Unlike the traditional eukaryotic cell cycle, the intricate division of apicomplexan parasites is regulated by multiple essential cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks)-related kinases (Crks) acting independently at several critical transitions and in unusual spatial contexts

  • T. gondii Crks (TgCrks) were a diverse group of proteins ranging from 34 to 212kDa (S1A Fig) that varied in mRNA abundance (S1B Fig)

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Summary

Introduction

Obligate intracellular parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa are responsible for many important diseases in humans and animals, including malaria, toxoplasmosis and cryptosporidiosis. Apicomplexan parasites use flexible mechanisms to replicate that are different than those of their hosts. Toxoplasma gondii undergoes endodyogeny in intermediate host stages, but replicates by endopolygeny in the definitive feline host. Fundamental differences between division modes are embedded in the features of the apicomplexan cell cycle comprised of two chromosome cycles [2, 3]. Chromosomes are replicated and segregated without budding, while each round of chromosome replication in the budding cycle leads to production of the daughter parasites. We recently showed that the ability to switch between chromosome cycles is partially linked to the unique bipartite structure of the T. gondii centrosome [3]. Weakening or separation of the outer centrosomal core that controls budding favors the nuclear cycle, while the strong association of the outer core with the inner core promotes cytokinesis and the budding cycle [3]

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