Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression

Surface membrane structure and composition define the biological niche of a unicellular organism, controlling how it interacts with and survives in its environment. The human and animal pathogen Trypanosoma brucei lives extracellularly in the blood of its mammalian host, where it must evade continua...

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Main Author: Miller, Thomas
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60098/
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author Miller, Thomas
author_facet Miller, Thomas
author_sort Miller, Thomas
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Surface membrane structure and composition define the biological niche of a unicellular organism, controlling how it interacts with and survives in its environment. The human and animal pathogen Trypanosoma brucei lives extracellularly in the blood of its mammalian host, where it must evade continual surveillance by the immune system whilst obtaining nutrients required for survival. It achieves this through antigenic variation of its major surface protein (the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored VSG) and surface compartmentalisation, retaining transporters and receptors essential for the uptake of nutrient in a specialised membrane invagination at the base of its flagellum – the flagellar pocket (the sole site of endocytosis and secretion in the parasite). This PhD exploits a high-confidence, validated cell surface proteome (‘surfeome’) for bloodstream-form T. brucei to test hypotheses about GPI-anchored protein sorting and flagellar pocket retention. It also attempts to contribute towards early-stage development of strategies for disease control through the recombinant production of surfeome components for testing as vaccine candidates. It has been proposed that sorting of trypanosome surface proteins to their target membrane domain is influenced by protein abundance, glycosylation, or the number of GPI anchors attached (‘GPI valence’). However, none of these hypotheses is sufficient to explain what we now know about the parasite cell surface. Instead, this project tests if the information required to direct GPI-anchored protein sorting is intrinsic to the GPI-insertion signal sequence itself. The GPI signal sequences from five T. brucei surface proteins (that localise to different domains on the parasite surface) were fused to exogenous fluorescent reporter proteins. These signal sequences allowed correct GPI attachment, but did not result in the differential localisations of the respective endogenous proteins, with all fusions diffused across the entire cell surface membrane. Significantly, results presented herein are incompatible with GPI valance being the primary mode of sorting of GPI-anchored proteins, raising further questions as to what controls the delivery of membrane components to the appropriate target membrane domain. No vaccines exist for protection against African trypanosomiasis. For the development of an effective vaccine, native-like recombinant antigens must be produced and purified. Initial experiments in this PhD project used the commercially available, Leishmania tarentolae-based system LEXSY; but its underperformance led to the development of a novel system based on Crithidia fasciculata (CExSy). A single marker C. fasciculata line (SMC) that expresses the T7 RNA polymerase and the tetracycline repressor protein was generated, along with a suite of plasmids that allowed production of >10 milligrams of GFP per litre of cell culture. Subsequent expression of three invariant, surface-exposed T. brucei antigens enabled characterisation of glycosylation status and isolation of high purity protein. This system may prove useful for downstream biochemical, structural and pre-clinical applications.
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spelling nottingham-600982025-02-28T14:50:14Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60098/ Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression Miller, Thomas Surface membrane structure and composition define the biological niche of a unicellular organism, controlling how it interacts with and survives in its environment. The human and animal pathogen Trypanosoma brucei lives extracellularly in the blood of its mammalian host, where it must evade continual surveillance by the immune system whilst obtaining nutrients required for survival. It achieves this through antigenic variation of its major surface protein (the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored VSG) and surface compartmentalisation, retaining transporters and receptors essential for the uptake of nutrient in a specialised membrane invagination at the base of its flagellum – the flagellar pocket (the sole site of endocytosis and secretion in the parasite). This PhD exploits a high-confidence, validated cell surface proteome (‘surfeome’) for bloodstream-form T. brucei to test hypotheses about GPI-anchored protein sorting and flagellar pocket retention. It also attempts to contribute towards early-stage development of strategies for disease control through the recombinant production of surfeome components for testing as vaccine candidates. It has been proposed that sorting of trypanosome surface proteins to their target membrane domain is influenced by protein abundance, glycosylation, or the number of GPI anchors attached (‘GPI valence’). However, none of these hypotheses is sufficient to explain what we now know about the parasite cell surface. Instead, this project tests if the information required to direct GPI-anchored protein sorting is intrinsic to the GPI-insertion signal sequence itself. The GPI signal sequences from five T. brucei surface proteins (that localise to different domains on the parasite surface) were fused to exogenous fluorescent reporter proteins. These signal sequences allowed correct GPI attachment, but did not result in the differential localisations of the respective endogenous proteins, with all fusions diffused across the entire cell surface membrane. Significantly, results presented herein are incompatible with GPI valance being the primary mode of sorting of GPI-anchored proteins, raising further questions as to what controls the delivery of membrane components to the appropriate target membrane domain. No vaccines exist for protection against African trypanosomiasis. For the development of an effective vaccine, native-like recombinant antigens must be produced and purified. Initial experiments in this PhD project used the commercially available, Leishmania tarentolae-based system LEXSY; but its underperformance led to the development of a novel system based on Crithidia fasciculata (CExSy). A single marker C. fasciculata line (SMC) that expresses the T7 RNA polymerase and the tetracycline repressor protein was generated, along with a suite of plasmids that allowed production of >10 milligrams of GFP per litre of cell culture. Subsequent expression of three invariant, surface-exposed T. brucei antigens enabled characterisation of glycosylation status and isolation of high purity protein. This system may prove useful for downstream biochemical, structural and pre-clinical applications. 2020-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60098/1/4263624_MillerT_Thesis_Corrected.pdf Miller, Thomas (2020) Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Trypanosoma; Membrane proteins; Recombinant proteins
spellingShingle Trypanosoma; Membrane proteins; Recombinant proteins
Miller, Thomas
Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
title Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
title_full Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
title_fullStr Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
title_short Exploring the surface of Trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
title_sort exploring the surface of trypanosoma brucei through protein sorting and recombinant expression
topic Trypanosoma; Membrane proteins; Recombinant proteins
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60098/