ToxoplasmaF-Box Protein 1 is Required for Daughter Cell Scaffold Function During Parasite Replication

Author:

Baptista Carlos Gustavo,Lis Agnieszka,Deng Bowen,Gas-Pascual Elisabet,Dittmar Ashley,Sigurdson Wade,West Christopher M.,Blader Ira J.

Abstract

ABSTRACTBy binding to the adaptor protein SKP1 and serving as substrate receptors for the Skp1, Cullin, F-box E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, F-box proteins regulate critical cellular processes including cell cycle progression and membrane trafficking. While F-box proteins are conserved throughout eukaryotes and are well studied in yeast, plants, and animals, studies in parasitic protozoa are lagging. We have identified eighteen putative F-box proteins in theToxoplasmagenome of which four have predicted homologs inPlasmodium. Two of the conserved F-box proteins were demonstrated to be important forToxoplasmafitness and here we focus on an F-box protein, named TgFBXO1, because it is the most highly expressed by replicative tachyzoites and was also identified in an interactome screen as aToxoplasmaSKP1 binding protein. TgFBXO1 interacts withToxoplasmaSKP1 confirming it as a bona fide F-box protein. In interphase parasites, TgFBXO1 is a component of the Inner Membrane Complex (IMC), which is an organelle that underlies the plasma membrane. Early during replication, TgFBXO1 localizes to the developing daughter cell scaffold, which is the site where the daughter cell IMC and microtubules form and extend from. TgFBXO1 localization to the daughter cell scaffold required centrosome duplication but occurred before segregation of the centrocone, which connects the spindle pole to the centrosomes. Daughter cell scaffold localization required TgFBXO1 N-myristoylation and was dependent on the small molecular weight GTPase, TgRab11b. Finally, we demonstrate that TgFBXO1 is required for parasite growth due to its function as a daughter cell scaffold effector. TgFBXO1 is the first F-box protein to be studied in apicomplexan parasites and represents the first protein demonstrated to be important for daughter cell scaffold function.AUTHOR SUMMARYToxoplasma gondiiis a protozoan parasite that can cause devastating and life-threatening disease in immunocompromised patients and in fetuses. Its replication is important to study because parasite growth is responsible for the pathology that develops in toxoplasmosis patients. The parasite replicates by a unique process named endodyogeny in which two daughter parasites develop within the mother cell. Early during this process the parasite creates a structure called the Daughter Cell Scaffold whose function is to mark the site from which daughter parasites will emerge. Here, we report the identification of one of the first proteins recruited to the Daughter Cell Scaffold and its importance in executing its function.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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