Evolution has enlisted a large variety of posttranslational modifications to provide temporal, spatial and functional regulation of the protein machinery of the cell. This project focuses on a specific example of a type that has seemingly been borrowed from the secretory pathway of eukaryotic cells, glycosylation, but might actually have first evolved in the cytoplasm of bacterial cells. We propose that complex cytoplasmic glycosylation exerts unique glycoregulatory functions in eukaryotes, and is subject to distinct controls relative to `conventional'protein glycosylation in the secretory pathway. The initial organism of analysis is the social amoeba Dictyostelium, and the target of the pathway studied here is Skp1, an adaptor of the SCF class of E3 ubiquitin ligases whose targets are frequently activated by phosphorylation and for which there may be a need for an independent mode of covalent regulation. Most remarkable is that this modification involves six enzymatic steps resulting in the assembly of a pentasaccharide attached to a highly conserved residue of proline. This modification, with a structural richness rivaling that of a peptide, is hypothesized to target only Skp1 and modulate its regulation of a critical developmental transition (culmination). Genetic manipulation of prolyl hydroxylase expression controls the O2-requirement for development suggesting a normal role for this enzyme in O2-regulation. Recent analysis of the effects of disrupting enzyme genes required for the sequential hydroxyproline-dependent glycosylation of Skp1 gives evidence for additional levels of hierarchical regulation of O2-dependent development, which is to be characterized in this project. Our recent discovery of the last enzyme (AgtA) needed to construct the pentasaccharide has positioned us finally to address these ideas genetically and biochemically. At the outset, we will in aim 1 define the linkages of the two ?-linked galactose sugars whose additions appear to be catalyzed by AgtA, which will enable chemical synthesis of the glycan for the later aims.
Aim 2 will examine the basis for apparent AgtA processivity in adding the two sugars, and how Skp1 and the catalytic and ?-propeller-like domains of AgtA mutually regulate each other's activity, hypothesized to be associated with quality control.
Aim 3 will employ reverse genetic and epistatic analysis of the glycosylation genes to test whether hierarchical regulation is linear or involves parallel signaling pathways. In addition, new antibodies will be developed to monitor progressive variations in Skp1 glycosylation in the cells which signal development. Finally, to identify the functionally most important features of the modification pathway, aim 4 will carry out tests for the evolutionary conservation of Skp1 glycoregulation in the apicomplexan Toxoplasma gondii, the agent for human toxoplasmosis. The knowledge gained is expected to generate new ideas of how the proteome is regulated in select protists in response to external signals such as O2 and internal signals such as sugar metabolites.

Public Health Relevance

MEDICAL RELEVANCE The study utilizes the NIH model organism Dictyostelium discoideum, a social amoeba allied genomically with the human parasite Entamoeba. Dictyostelium, which offers special advantages for molecular, biochemical and cell biological studies owing to its free-living, wall-less lifestyle and haploid genome, has proven to be a useful model for select pathways of protein glycosylation of various other types of protists. One example is the cytoplasmic glycosylation pathway examined in this investigation. Bioinformatics and early biochemical studies indicate that the main part of the pathway is present in the large Phytophthora group of plant pathogens, the agent for human toxoplasmosis Toxoplasma gondii, and other protists. Since T. gondii is an intracellular pathogen, Dictyostelium offers an attractive surrogate host for the biochemical and reverse genetic analysis of the Toxoplasma genes that are candidates for the Skp1 modification pathway in this organism. This will serve as a prelude for future direct studies on the function of the pathway for O2-regulation of T. gondii, which is widely disseminated latently in the human population and for which, if it is re-activated, pharmacological therapies are extremely limited.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01GM084383-02S1
Application #
8065710
Study Section
Membrane Biology and Protein Processing (MBPP)
Program Officer
Marino, Pamela
Project Start
2009-01-01
Project End
2012-11-30
Budget Start
2009-12-01
Budget End
2010-11-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$98,440
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Department
Biochemistry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
878648294
City
Oklahoma City
State
OK
Country
United States
Zip Code
73117
Gas-Pascual, Elisabet; Ichikawa, Hiroshi Travis; Sheikh, Mohammed Osman et al. (2018) CRISPR/Cas9 and glycomics tools for Toxoplasma glycobiology. J Biol Chem :
Saha, Sudeshna; Coleman, Bradley I; Dubey, Rashmi et al. (2017) Two Phosphoglucomutase Paralogs Facilitate Ionophore-Triggered Secretion of the Toxoplasma Micronemes. mSphere 2:
Rahman, Kazi; Mandalasi, Msano; Zhao, Peng et al. (2017) Characterization of a cytoplasmic glucosyltransferase that extends the core trisaccharide of the Toxoplasma Skp1 E3 ubiquitin ligase subunit. J Biol Chem 292:18644-18659
Rahman, Kazi; Zhao, Peng; Mandalasi, Msano et al. (2016) The E3 Ubiquitin Ligase Adaptor Protein Skp1 Is Glycosylated by an Evolutionarily Conserved Pathway That Regulates Protist Growth and Development. J Biol Chem 291:4268-80
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Feasley, Christa L; Hykollari, Alba; Paschinger, Katharina et al. (2013) N-glycomic and N-glycoproteomic studies in the social amoebae. Methods Mol Biol 983:205-29
Xu, Yuechi; Wang, Zhuo A; Green, Rebekah S et al. (2012) Role of the Skp1 prolyl-hydroxylation/glycosylation pathway in oxygen dependent submerged development of Dictyostelium. BMC Dev Biol 12:31

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