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Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz
ISSN: 1678-8060 EISSN: 1678-8060
Vol. 102, Num. 6, 2007, pp. 757-762

Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Vol. 102, No. 6, 2007, pp. 757-762

Effects of Trypanosoma brucei tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetases silencing by RNA interference

Liliana Torcoroma García/*, Ney Ribeiro Leite, Juan D Alfonzo**, Otavio Henrique Thiemann/*/+

Instituto de Física de São Carlos, Universidade de São Paulo, Caixa Postal 369, 13560-590 São Carlos, SP, Brasil *Departamento de Genética e Evolução, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, São Carlos, SP, Brasil **Department of Microbiology, Ohio State Biochemistry Program and the Ohio State University RNA Group, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, US
+Corresponding author: thiemann@if.sc.usp.br

Financial support: CNPq (472570/2004-8), Fapesp (98/14138-2). LTG is a Capes doctorate fellow. NRL is a Fapesp fellow (02/ 01883-9). JDA is supported by a grant from the American Heart Association.

Received 27 April 2007 Accepted 1st August 2007

Code Number: oc07121

The kinetoplast genetic code deviates from the universal code in that 90% of mitochondrial tryptophans are specified by UGA instead of UGG codons. A single nucleus-encoded tRNATrp(CCA) is used by both nuclear and mitochondria genes, since all kinetoplast tRNAs are imported into the mitochondria from the cytoplasm. To allow decoding of the mitochondrial UGA codons as tryptophan, the tRNATrp(CCA) anticodon is changed to UCA by an editing event. Two tryptophanyl tRNA synthetases (TrpRSs) have been identified in Trypanosoma brucei: TbTrpRS1 and TbTrpRS2 which localize to the cytoplasm and mitochondria respectively. We used inducible RNA interference (RNAi) to assess the role of TbTrpRSs. Our data validates previous observations of TrpRS as potential drug design targets and investigates the RNAi effect on the mitochondria of the parasite.

Key words: tryptophanyl tRNA synthetase - RNA interference - kinetoplastid - Trypanosoma brucei

Parasitic protozoa represent a considerable source of human diseases predominant in the tropical and subtropical regions of the globe. Of particular relevance are parasites belonging to the family Trypanosomatidae. Trypanosoma brucei and its subspecies are responsible for heavy socioeconomic losses in 36 sub-Saharan Africa countries (1.6 million DALYs) and lead to an estimated 48 thousand deaths per year. Therapy against African sleeping sickness has always been difficult, especially when the disease has reached an advanced stage with central nervous system involvement, as few effective drugs are available. For these reasons, the search and validation of new pharmacological targets against trypanosomiasis is of great concern.

Trypanosomatids are early diverging flagellates that differ from other eukaryotes in a number of features. They contain a remarkable single mitochondrion (the kinetoplast) harboring a large mass of circular DNA molecules concatenated in a unique arrangement, the kinetoplast DNA or kDNA (Lukes et al. 2002). The kinetoplast genetic code, like many other mitochondrial genomes and to the exception of plants, deviates from the universal code in that 90% of tryptophans are specified by UGA instead of UGG codons, although both codons are used in translation. A single nucleus-encoded tRNATrp(CCA) is used by both the nuclear and mitochondrial genes. Since all kinetoplast tRNAs are encoded in the nucleus and later imported into the mitochondria (Lima & Simpson 1996), a C to U deamination event at position 34 of tRNATrp(CCA) changes the anticodon from CCA to UCA allowing the decoding of UGA stop codons to Trp (Alfonzo et al. 1999).

The identification of two tryptophanyl tRNA synthetases (TrpRSs) proteins in T. brucei cells was reported (Charrière et al. 2006). TbTrpRS1 (cytoplasmic, accession no. XM821841) and TbTrpRS2 (mitochondrial, accession no. XM820510), where TbTrpRS2 is able of aminoacylate both the unedited tRNATrp(CCA) and the edited tRNATrp(UCA). We used inducible RNA interference (RNAi) in combination with biochemical techniques to assess the role of TbTrpRSs, thereby extending previous observations (Charrière et al. 2006) and validating the TrpRSs as potential drug design targets.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The nucleic acid and amino acid sequences of both genes, TbTrpRS1 and 2, were used to search the T. brucei genomic databases, and the results showed no significant identity with other T. brucei genes as well as with their human and Escherichia coli homologues. A sequence identity of 57% is shared between TbTrpRS1 and 2 distributed along the entire sequence. Due to the low sequence identity, we chose the full length ORF sequences of TbTrpRS1 and 2 for RNAi analysis, based on the idea of increasing the specificity and efficiency of RNAi knockdown (LaCount et al. 2000). T. brucei 29-13 procyclic cells were grown in SDM-79 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum in the presence of hygromycin (50 µg/ml) and G418 (15 µg/ml) at 25-26ºC without agitation (Wang et al. 2000). Each specific DNA for RNAi experiments was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from T. brucei 29-13 procyclic genomic DNA using the following gene-specific primers, containing the XhoI and HindIII (underlined) restrictions sites: TbTrpRs1a 5'-CGCCTCGAGATGAC- TGAAGCCGTTGTAACACCGTGGTCT-3', TbTrpRs1b 5'-TCAAGCTTTCACTGGGTTGCCGCCTT- CTTCGCTGGAC-3', TbTrpRs2a 5'-TACTCGAGATG- CGCCGGGCTTCACATGTTTGCACGTC-3' and TbTrpRs2b 5'-CTAAGCTTCTATGCCATAATGTTG- CGCACCTCCGTAAA-3'. The PCRs were carried out in a PTC-100 thermocycler (MJ Research Inc.) with 0.2 units of Taq DNA polymerase (Biotools) according to the manufacturer conditions. The samples were subjected to 3 min denaturation at 94ºC followed by 20 cycles of denaturation at 94ºC for 0.5 min, annealing at 54ºC for 0.5 min, and extension at 72ºC for 1.5 min. A final step at 72ºC for 10 min was added to maximize the full-length products. Each PCR fragment was cloned into the pCR2.1TOPO vector and sequenced prior to cloning into the XhoI/HindIII sites of the pZJM vector (Wirtz et al. 1999). These constructs were linearized by NotI cleavage and transfected into procyclic T. brucei 29-13 cell line by electroporation as previously described (Wirtz et al. 1999, Wang et al. 2000). The transfected cells were cloned by the limiting dilution technique and selected under 2.5 µg/ml phleomycin until stable cell lines were obtained. To induce synthesis of the double stranded RNA (dsRNA), cells were incubated in medium containing tetracycline (1.5 µg/ml) for 24 h and transferred daily to fresh medium with tetracycline. Growth curves were obtained using cells fixed with 4% (v/v) formaldhehyde in PBS and counted using a hemacytometer.

For cell morphology analysis, non-induced and tet-induced cultures were examined at different time intervals after RNAi induction by light microscopy. We used different staining techniques: (a) DAPI (4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, Sigma) for nuclear and kinetoplast DNA. Cells were washed in PBS, and then fixed and stained with DAPI (75 ng/ml) for 1 min and analyzed by fluorescence microscopy at 350 nm of l excitation; (b) Mitotracker: the mitochondrion of living trypanosomes was visualized with the potential sensitive vital stain MitoTracker Red CMXRos (l Em 579nm and lEx 599nm from molecular probe), a derivative of X-rosamine. Cells in log phase of growth were incubated with 100 nM Mitotracker Red CMXRos at 28ºC for 5 min in SMGHP, then, the cells were washed with fresh media and finally, incubated without dye for 20 min; (c) DAPI-RED: fluorescence images of cells stained with 60 µM DAPI and Mitotracker Red CMXRos 5 µM. For fixation, cells were washed with PBS and suspended in 4% freshly made paraformaldehyde in PBS. The percentage of morphologic anomalies (number nucleus, kinetoplasts, and form) was determined in 150 cells.

To determine the percentage of TbTrpRSs mRNA inhibition, total T. brucei RNA was isolated using Trizol (Life Technologies) after RNAi induction from the different cell lines at different time points. The TbTrpRS1 and TbTrpRS2 mRNA were estimated by semi-quantitative RT-PCR (Kit One Step RT-PCR from Qiagen) and by quantitative real-time PCR (QPCR), using the spliced leader (SLRNA) primer 5'-AACTAACGCTATATA- AGTATCAGTTTCTGTACTTTATTG-3' (Campbell et al. 1984) and TbTrpRs1b and TbTrpRs2b primers. For the semi-quantitavite RT-PCR experiments 100 ng of total RNA of each sample were added to a final reaction volume of 50 µl. The samples, after RT-PCR were analyzed in a 2% agarose gel. The bands were quantitated using the Kodak ds 1D digital science V.3.0.1 software. The analysis was performed comparing the intensity of the ethidium bromide stained bands of control (non-induced) and RNAi induced samples. QPCR was performed using the Absolute QPCR SYBR Green Mix (Abgene Advanced Biotecnologies Ltd.) as previously described (Yin et al. 2001) and performed in a Rotor Gene Real Time PCR (Corbett Research, Uniscience). The QPCR data obtained was analyzed using paired t-tests on the linear 2-DCt data set (Livak & Schmittgen 2001). The RT-PCR and QPCR experiments of TbTrpRSs were performed. As a quantitation standard the T. brucei glycosomal glyceraldehydes 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (gGAPDH, X59955.1) gene was used with the primer pair TbGAPDHa 5'-CCTC GGGAATGAGATTGATGTCGT-TGCTGT-3' and TbGAPDHb 5'-CACATACTCCAC- ACCAAGCTTTCCC-3' in a standard PCR, as described above. Samples from induced, non-induced and non-transfected (control) cells were tested.

Oxygen uptake by T. brucei cells was measured with a biological oxygen monitor DM4 equipped (Digimed) with oxygen probe. The rate (ppm) was calculated by assuming the oxygen content of air-saturated water is 0.276 mM at 28ºC (according to manufacturer instructions). The cell concentration used was 1*10E6 cells/ml.

RESULTS

RNAi expression against TbTrpRS1 resulted in severe growth inhibition 4 h after induction (reduction of 84% relative to control cells) with cell death after 24 h of induction. TbTrpRS2 knockdown after 6 h of tetracycline induction produced a 79% growth inhibition and complete cell death after 72 h of induction. Both cell lines exhibited eventual complete arrest of growth, which was more quickly achieved in post-induced TbTrpRS1 cultures (24 h) than in TbTrpRS2 (72 h), as shown in Figs 1, 2. These cultures showed no recovery after release from tetracycline induction, confirming the lethal and irreversible effect of the gene knockdowns (data not shown).

Expression of TbTrpRS1 dsRNA led to total degradation of the specific mRNA, which was undetectable by semi-quantitative RT-PCR. QPCR analysis revealed that transcript levels were reduced more than 16 fold in cells after 24 h of TbTrpRS1 dsRNA induction (Fig 2). Expression of TbTrpRS2 dsRNA also resulted in an efficient degradation of the cognate mRNA resulting in an approximately 3-fold decrease after 48 h of induction and a complete silencing at 72 h of induction, after which TbTrpRS2 mRNA amounts were not detectable by either semi-quantitative RT-PCR or QPCR (levels < 13 folds) (Fig 2). These data confirmed the efficiency of silencing of expression of the TbTrpRSs by RNAi. Transcript levels were not significantly changed in the non-induced TbTrpRS2 controls or in the wild type T. brucei 29-13 cells (P = 0.62). An unrelated transcript for T. brucei gGAPDH remained unaffected in the samples analyzed. Furthermore, silencing of one TbTrpRS gene did not influence the expression of the other (data not shown). The non-induced T. brucei cells transfected with the TbTrpRS1 RNAi construct exhibited a small reduction (0.039 folds; P = 0.06) of the TbTrpRS1 mRNA as compared to the non-transfected T. brucei 29-13 cells. This phenomenon can be explained by a leakage in the T7 dual-promoter system, which has been previously observed (Durand-Dubief et al. 2003).

To analyze the cell morphology, non-induced and tetracycline induced cultures were examined. The phenotype of the control (non-induced) cells appeared normal (Fig 3A, Fig 4A). The distribution of cell morphologies of induced and non-induced knockdowns is presented in the Table. The cells were classified in two categories according to the number of kinetoplasts (K) and nuclei (N) per cell. " Normal " constituted cells with 1K1N or with 2K1N/2K2N, representing different stages of cell division. Cells were classified as " abnormal " when containing a different number of K or N. TbTrpRS1 knockdown cells also presented a round phenotype and were classified as 'spheres'. In the control cultures, the population mainly (90-94%) constituted of 1K1N cells and a minority of dividing cells (2K1N or 2K2N) as shown in Fig 4Aand in the Table.

n the TbTrpRS1 RNAi cells, morphological abnormalities can be seen after 9 h of tetracycline induction. At 24 h after tetracycline induction the majority of cells (41%) increased in size, and contained numerous nuclei, kinetoplast, and several flagella, suggesting inhibition of cytokinesis. A significant percentage (33%) presented the 'sphere' phenotype lacking flagella (Table, Figs 3B). The TbTrpRS2 knockdown leads to a wide range of morphologic abnormalities. These phenotypes included cells with partially detached flagella (two or more flagella) (Fig 3B), cells with incomplete cell separations (Fig 3C), mini-trypanosomes that lack nuclei (Fig 4D) and cells with defects in cytokinesis (multinucleated; Fig 4E). At 24 h after tetracycline induction, a high proportion of the cells (36%) presented abnormalities in their morphology (Figs 3B, C, Fig 4B) compared to untreated cells, in which the percentage of abnormal cells was no more than 10% (Table). The depletion of TbTrpRS2 resulted in the accumulation of mini-trypanosomes that lack nuclei, suggesting an interruption of mitosis without inhibiting kinetoplast segregation, which led to cytokinesis and cell division and generated enucleated daughter cells (Ploubidou et al. 1999). In Figs 3 and 4 are shown some representative types of cells found in the knockdown of TbTrpRS1 and 2.

We used the mitochondria-specific stain, Mitotracker (molecular probes), in order to assay functional changes occurring during TbTrpRS2 RNAi induction. A typical reticular pattern is visible throughout the non-induced cells, representing the stained mitochondria, and this patter is significantly altered after TbTrpRS2 RNAi induction. Induced cells show a decrease in the mitochondria stain, in particular after 48 h of induction (Figs 4C), indicating dramatic changes of metabolic function. To corroborate these results, the respiration rate or demand of oxygen (DO) was determined using a biological oxygen monitor DM4 (Digimed). The uninduced cells exhibit non-significant changes in their respiration rate compared with the control (P = 0.789). The respiration rate (ppm) was significantly decreased (64%) at 48 h post-induction (Fig 5). This result is consistent with the three-fold decrease in TbTrpRS2 mRNA (Fig 2). After 72 h the DO from these cells was undetectable. The quantitative mRNA analysis from TbTrpRS2 RNAi induced samples suggested that the decrease in the DO and the reduction of the mitochondrial potential occurred after the mRNA depletion (Figs 5, 6). According to these results, we can conclude that slight perturbations in the expression of TbTrpRS2 can trigger significant and immediate alterations in the mitochondrial function and redox potential. In addition, at 72 h post-induction, the complete degradation of specific mRNA in the knockdown cells was compatible with the complete lost of respiration activity and mitochondrial membrane potential (Figs 5, 6). Furthermore, the inhibition of TbTrpRS2 synthesis could decrease the levels of mitochondrial translation, with a decline of mitochondrial redox potential, respiration capability and finally triggering cell death. The TbTrpRS1 RNAi induced deleterious phenotype (Figs 1, 2) prevented an investigation of its role in mitochondria function, although such a role seems improbable.

DISCUSSION

The results we report are consistent with previous observations (Charrière et al. 2006) describing the existence of two TrpRSs genes in T. brucei cells and that knockdown of TbTrpRSs by RNAi effectively inhibits the replication of T. brucei procyclic forms in culture. In our experiments we extended those observations by the use of full length TbTrpRS1 and 2 genes in the RNAi constructs. This contributed to a more pronounced sequence-specific knockdown, leading in a clearer physiological effect. Our results show that the outcome of RNA interference on TbTrpRS2 is a rapid decrease of mitochondrial activity, leading to a rapid cell death. The rapid rate which mutant phenotypes develop after expressing TbTrpRSs dsRNA indicate that these proteins have short half-lives since those enzymes are not abundant in the cells (data not shown). Our results confirm the central role that TbTrpRS1 and 2 play in cell viability, validating these proteins as targets for inhibitor development. In particular TbTrpRS2 is of interest due to its low sequence identity to other TbTrpRSs genes, especially that of humans, and for its role in blocking mitochondrial activity and resulting in cell death.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

To the members of the Protein Crystallography and Structural Biology Group (IFSC-USP) for the helpful discussions in the course of this work. To Prof. Dr David Campbell Laboratory for providing pZJM vector and T. brucei 29-13 procyclic cells (Microbiology Immunology Molecular Genetics, University of California), Prof. Dr Heloisa Selistre de Araujo (LBBM, Federal University of São Carlos) for the QPCR support and Prof. Dr Luiz Antonio Daniel (São Carlos Engineering School, University of São Paulo) for support in the DO measurements.

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Copyright 2007 Instituto Oswaldo Cruz - Fiocruz


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