Abstract

Lathosterol oxidase (LSO) catalyzes the formation of the C-5-C-6 double bond in the synthesis of various types of sterols in mammals, fungi, plants, and protozoa. In Leishmania parasites, mutations in LSO or other sterol biosynthetic genes are associated with amphotericin B resistance. To investigate the biological roles of sterol C-5-C-6 desaturation, we generated an LSO-null mutant line (lso- ) in Leishmania major, the causative agent for cutaneous leishmaniasis. lso- parasites lacked the ergostane-based sterols commonly found in wild-type L. major and instead accumulated equivalent sterol species without the C-5-C-6 double bond. These mutant parasites were replicative in culture and displayed heightened resistance to amphotericin B. However, they survived poorly after reaching the maximal density and were highly vulnerable to the membrane-disrupting detergent Triton X-100. In addition, lso- mutants showed defects in regulating intracellular pH and were hypersensitive to acidic conditions. They also had potential alterations in the carbohydrate composition of lipophosphoglycan, a membrane-bound virulence factor in Leishmania All these defects in lso- were corrected upon the restoration of LSO expression. Together, these findings suggest that the C-5-C-6 double bond is vital for the structure of the sterol core, and while the loss of LSO can lead to amphotericin B resistance, it also makes Leishmania parasites vulnerable to biologically relevant stress.IMPORTANCE Sterols are essential membrane components in eukaryotes, and sterol synthesis inhibitors can have potent effects against pathogenic fungi and trypanosomatids. Understanding the roles of sterols will facilitate the development of new drugs and counter drug resistance. LSO is required for the formation of the C-5-C-6 double bond in the sterol core structure in mammals, fungi, protozoans, plants, and algae. Functions of this C-5-C-6 double bond are not well understood. In this study, we generated and characterized a lathosterol oxidase-null mutant in Leishmania major Our data suggest that LSO is vital for the structure and membrane-stabilizing functions of leishmanial sterols. In addition, our results imply that while mutations in lathosterol oxidase can confer resistance to amphotericin B, an important antifungal and antiprotozoal agent, the alteration in sterol structure leads to significant defects in stress response that could be exploited for drug development.

Highlights

  • Lathosterol oxidase (LSO) catalyzes the formation of the C-5–C-6 double bond in the synthesis of various types of sterols in mammals, fungi, plants, and protozoa

  • The predicted open reading frame (ORF) contains 302 amino acids with four transmembrane helices and no obvious signal peptide, and it is expected to catalyze the formation of a double bond between C-5 and C-6 in the B ring of sterol intermediates

  • To complement the null mutants, we introduced an LSO-expressing plasmid into the lsoϪ mutant to generate the lsoϪ/ϩLSO mutant

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lathosterol oxidase (LSO) catalyzes the formation of the C-5–C-6 double bond in the synthesis of various types of sterols in mammals, fungi, plants, and protozoa. LsoϪ parasites lacked the ergostane-based sterols commonly found in wild-type L. major and instead accumulated equivalent sterol species without the C-5–C-6 double bond These mutant parasites were replicative in culture and displayed heightened resistance to amphotericin B. LsoϪ mutants showed defects in regulating intracellular pH and were hypersensitive to acidic conditions They had potential alterations in the carbohydrate composition of lipophosphoglycan, a membrane-bound virulence factor in Leishmania. All these defects in lsoϪ were corrected upon the restoration of LSO expression Together, these findings suggest that the C-5–C-6 double bond is vital for the structure of the sterol core, and while the loss of LSO can lead to amphotericin B resistance, it makes Leishmania parasites vulnerable to biologically relevant stress. Multiple Amp B-resistant Leishmania lines show altered sterol composition and mutations in sterol biosynthetic enzymes, such as the sterol C-24-methyltransferase (SMT; EC 2.1.1.41) and sterol C-14-alpha-demethylase (C14DM; EC 1.14.13.70) [13,14,15,16]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call