Abstract

African trypanosomes express three virtually identical non-selenium glutathione peroxidase (Px)-type enzymes which preferably detoxify lipid-derived hydroperoxides. As shown previously, bloodstream Trypanosoma brucei lacking the mitochondrial Px III display only a weak and transient proliferation defect whereas parasites that lack the cytosolic Px I and Px II undergo extremely fast lipid peroxidation and cell lysis. The phenotype can completely be rescued by supplementing the medium with the α-tocopherol derivative Trolox. The mechanism underlying the rapid cell death remained however elusive. Here we show that the lysosome is the origin of the cellular injury. Feeding the px I–II knockout parasites with Alexa Fluor-conjugated dextran or LysoTracker in the presence of Trolox yielded a discrete lysosomal staining. Yet upon withdrawal of the antioxidant, the signal became progressively spread over the whole cell body and was completely lost, respectively. T. brucei acquire iron by endocytosis of host transferrin. Supplementing the medium with iron or transferrin induced, whereas the iron chelator deferoxamine and apo-transferrin attenuated lysis of the px I–II knockout cells. Immunofluorescence microscopy with MitoTracker and antibodies against the lysosomal marker protein p67 revealed that disintegration of the lysosome precedes mitochondrial damage. In vivo experiments confirmed the negligible role of the mitochondrial peroxidase: Mice infected with px III knockout cells displayed only a slightly delayed disease development compared to wild-type parasites. Our data demonstrate that in bloodstream African trypanosomes, the lysosome, not the mitochondrion, is the primary site of oxidative damage and cytosolic trypanothione/tryparedoxin-dependent peroxidases protect the lysosome from iron-induced membrane peroxidation. This process appears to be closely linked to the high endocytic rate and distinct iron acquisition mechanisms of the infective stage of T. brucei. The respective knockout of the cytosolic px I–II in the procyclic insect form resulted in cells that were fully viable in Trolox-free medium.

Highlights

  • In many tissues, the mitochondrial electron transport chain constitutes the primary source of endogenously produced superoxide anion, the precursor molecule of most reactive oxygen species [1,2]

  • Bloodstream Trypanosoma brucei in which the genes for cytosolic lipid hydroperoxide-detoxifying peroxidases have been knocked out undergo an extremely rapid membrane peroxidation and lyse within less than two hours when they are cultured without an exogenous antioxidant

  • This may at least partially be due to the lower endocytosis rate in the insect form which is downregulated approximately 10-fold compared to that of the BS form [23]

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Summary

Introduction

The mitochondrial electron transport chain constitutes the primary source of endogenously produced superoxide anion, the precursor molecule of most reactive oxygen species [1,2]. Hydrogen peroxide and lipid hydroperoxides formed as products are primarily removed by glutathione peroxidases (GPxs) [3]. Among the eight GPxs described in mammals, GPx4 is the only one that accepts phospholipid hydroperoxides as substrates even within intact biomembranes [4]. Another organelle that plays a critical role in oxidant-induced cell damage is the lysosome [5]. Intralysosomal iron, which probably represents the major fraction of cellular redox-active iron, can catalyze the peroxidation of membrane lipids. Once lysosomal rupture has occurred, the cell is irreversibly committed to death [6]

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