Abstract

Encystation-specific cysteine protease (ESCP) was the first membrane-associated protein described to be part of the lysosome-like peripheral vacuoles in the intestinal parasite Giardia lamblia. ESCP is homologous to cathepsin C enzymes of higher eukaryotes, but is distinguished from other lysosomal cysteine proteases because it possesses a transmembrane domain and a short cytoplasmic tail. Tyrosine-based motifs within tails of membrane proteins are known to participate in endosomal/lysosomal protein sorting in higher eukaryotes. In this study, we show that a YRPI motif within the ESCP cytoplasmic tail is necessary and sufficient to mediate ESCP sorting to peripheral vacuoles in Giardia. Deletion and point mutation analysis demonstrated that the tyrosine residue is critical for ESCP sorting, whereas amino acids located at the Y+1 (Arg), Y+2 (Pro), and Y+3 (Ile) positions show minimal effect. Loss of the motif resulted in surface localization, whereas addition of the motif to a variant-specific surface protein resulted in lysosomal localization. Although Giardia trophozoites lack a morphologically discernible Golgi apparatus, our findings indicate that this parasite directs proteins to the lysosomes using a conserved sorting signal similar to that used by yeast and mammalian cells. Because Giardia is one of the earliest branching protist, these results demonstrate that sorting motifs for specific protein traffic developed very early during eukaryotic evolution.

Highlights

  • Encystation-specific cysteine protease (ESCP) was the first membrane-associated protein described to be part of the lysosome-like peripheral vacuoles in the intestinal parasite Giardia lamblia

  • We show that a YRPI motif within the ESCP cytoplasmic tail is necessary and sufficient to mediate ESCP sorting to peripheral vacuoles in Giardia

  • In mammalian cells as well as in yeast, specific sorting signals direct transmembrane proteins to endosomes and/or lysosomes, either from the trans-Golgi network (TGN) or from the cell surface, and involve tyrosine-based motifs (YXX␾, where X is any amino acid and ␾ is an amino acid with a bulky hydrophobic side chain) and/or acidic cluster dileucine motifs located in their cytoplasmic tails

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Summary

THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY

Vol 278, No 8, Issue of February 21, pp. 6420 –6426, 2003 Printed in U.S.A. Sorting of Encystation-specific Cysteine Protease to Lysosome-like Peripheral Vacuoles in Giardia lamblia Requires a Conserved Tyrosine-based Motif*□S. In mammalian cells as well as in yeast, specific sorting signals direct transmembrane proteins to endosomes and/or lysosomes, either from the TGN or from the cell surface, and involve tyrosine-based motifs (YXX␾, where X is any amino acid and ␾ is an amino acid with a bulky hydrophobic side chain) and/or acidic cluster dileucine motifs located in their cytoplasmic tails. These motifs can be found in single or multiple copies and in combination [14]. We show that a tyrosine-based sorting signal (YRPI) within the ESCP cytoplasmic tail functions in the sorting of ESCP to lysosome-like peripheral vacuoles in Giardia

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