Abstract

Paracoccidioides brasiliensis is a temperature-dependent dimorphic fungus that causes systemic paracoccidioidomycosis, a granulomatous disease. The massive production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by the host's cellular immune response is an essential strategy to restrain the fungal growth. Among the ROS, the hydroperoxides are very toxic antimicrobial compounds and fungal peroxidases are part of the pathogen neutralizing antioxidant arsenal against the host's defense. Among them, the peroxiredoxins are highlighted, since some estimates suggest that they are capable of decomposing most of the hydroperoxides generated in the host's mitochondria and cytosol. We presently characterized a unique P. brasiliensis 1-Cys peroxiredoxin (PbPrx1). Our results reveal that it can decompose hydrogen peroxide and organic hydroperoxides very efficiently. We showed that dithiolic, but not monothiolic compounds or heterologous thioredoxin reductant systems, were able to retain the enzyme activity. Structural analysis revealed that PbPrx1 has an α/β structure that is similar to the 1-Cys secondary structures described to date and that the quaternary conformation is represented by a dimer, independently of the redox state. We investigated the PbPrx1 localization using confocal microscopy, fluorescence-activated cell sorter, and immunoblot, and the results suggested that it localizes both in the cytoplasm and at the cell wall of the yeast and mycelial forms of P. brasiliensis, as well as in the yeast mitochondria. Our present results point to a possible role of this unique P. brasiliensis 1-Cys Prx1 in the fungal antioxidant defense mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) is a systemic mycosis endemic in Latin America

  • Amino acid sequence alignments of PbPrx1 with 1-Cys Prx1 from other species shows that PbPrx1 has only one conserved cysteine (Cys51; Supplementary Figure 2, red asterisk), which corresponds to the Cys91 from S. cerevisiae ScPrx1

  • Our results suggest that PbPrx1 localizes to the cytoplasm and cell wall of the yeast and mycelial forms of P. brasiliensis, as well as in the yeast mitochondria

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Summary

Introduction

Paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) is a systemic mycosis endemic in Latin America. Lethality rates range from 3 to 5% and about 80% of the PCM cases are reported in Brazilian patients (Martinez, 2017). The thermal dimorphic fungus Paracoccidioides brasiliensis is one of the PCM etiologic agents and the infection occurs by inhalation of fungal conidia from the environment mycelial. Among the several species generated by the respiratory burst, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and peroxynitrite (NOO−) are able to generate secondary reactive species, such as organic hydroperoxides (OHPs), especially lipid hydroperoxides and other reactive species. These compounds can cause protein dysfunction and damage of biomolecules, negatively affecting the pathogen homeostasis (Halliwell and Gutteridge, 2015; El-Benna et al, 2016). Some fungal pathogens are able to produce OHPs to protect themselves against invasion and host tissue destruction by other microorganisms (Deighton et al, 1999)

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