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Eukaryotic Cell, December 2003, p. 1234-1245, Vol. 2, No. 6
1535-9778/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/EC.2.6.1234-1245.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Clara Moch, Ghislaine Fryd-Versavel, Anne Fleury-Aubusson, and Loïc Morin*
Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire 4, Université de Paris-Sud, Orsay, France
Received 4 April 2003/ Accepted 5 August 2003
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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S. histriomuscorum (previously called Oxytricha fallax and O. trifallax) (3) is a free-living ciliated protist from the hypotrich subgroup that is characterized by a highly differentiated pattern of the vegetative cell. This pattern includes a complex oral apparatus and a clustered body ciliature which are duplicated in an orderly process during cell division (22). The S. histriomuscorum life cycle is interesting in that the vegetative cell undergoes a complete dedifferentiation process when it is deprived of food, leading in about 3 days to a resting stage which is called a cyst. The mature cyst has lost much water, the whole ciliature and basal bodies have disappeared, numerous autophagic vacuoles (lysosomes) that were particularly active during encystment are present, and a multilayered cyst wall surrounds the spherical cell, which appears to be metabolically inactive (23). The nature of the cyst wall is unknown, but it may be hypothesized that it includes glycoproteins, as was shown in the case of Paraurostyla sp., a related hypotrich species (29, 44).
In presence of either living food or 0.2% milk powder in water, the excystment process takes place in a few hours, leading through a massive influx of water and the resorption of the cell wall to completely differentiated swimming vegetative cells.
Different taxonomic groups, including both unicellular and multicellular organisms, display encystment-excystment behavior, and two previous studies have shown that cysteine proteases are involved in the excystment process. The first described two distinct proteases that modulate excystation in the case of the trematode Paragonimus westermani metacercariae (9). The second showed that cathepsin B was the protease responsible for the cyst wall degradation in the diplomonad flagellate Giardia (60).
Cysteine proteases constitute a wide superfamily of proteases, including viral, legumain-like, and papain-like proteases. The papain-like group is further divided into families, including calpains and papains, and the papain family includes the bleomycin hydrolase, cathepsin B, and cathepsin L subfamilies (47). Calpains are calcium-dependent cytosolic enzymes, while cathepsins are located mainly in lysosomes. Both were previously known to be involved in intracellular protein turnover in mammals, but it appears that they display a much larger array of functions in protists (26, 37, 40).
During a general study of the genes that are differentially expressed in the cyst and vegetative cells, i.e., during the excystment of S. histriomuscorum, we isolated three different cDNAs whose sequences appeared, based on a BLAST analysis, to be highly similar to those of the calpain, cathepsin B, and cathepsin L family genes. Excystation (but not encystation or cell division) was blocked at a particular differentiating stage when cysteine protease inhibitors were added in the nutrient medium, further confirming the involvement of cysteine proteases in the excystment process. The expression pattern was life cycle stage dependent for both cysteine protease genes. The calpain-like gene is not expressed strongly in cysts and early excysting cells, while cathepsins are expressed more in vegetative cells than in resting cysts and early excysting cells.
The whole sequences of the corresponding minichromosomes were determined, and a comparative analysis of the protein sequences shows an important deletion in the occluding loop of cathepsin B, a cathepsin H signature in the cathepsin L-like sequence, and the absence of the calpain III linker domain and calcium-binding motif in the calpain-like sequence. A phylogenetic study confirmed the cathepsin H identification and the diverging status of the cathepsin B and calpain genes.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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For inhibition experiments, dividing vegetative cells were incubated with 10 µM inhibitor in feeding medium. To test for encystment, starving vegetative cells were incubated with 10 µM inhibitor in mineral water. To test for excystment, cysts (about 2,000) were incubated into either food medium or the excystment medium described above with 50 nM to 100 µM inhibitor. Parallel assays of untreated controls and inhibitor solvent controls were performed. The tested inhibitors were obtained from Sigma and included E64 [N-(trans-epoxysuccinyl)-L-leucine 4-guanidinobutylamide], CA-074 (L-trans-epoxysuccinyl-Ile-Pro-OH-propylamide), CA-074Me (L-trans-epoxysuccinyl-Ile-Pro-Ome-propylamide), MG132 (Z-Leu-Leu-Leu-al), calpain inhibitor II (N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-Met-al), and lactacystin.
Assessment of cell division, encystment, and excystment was done with a Leitz dissecting microscope. Excystment rate analysis was carried out after an incubation time of 24 h by counting swimming vegetative cells. For cell structure examination, samples were impregnated as described for the silver proteinate method (54); cysts were then either mounted in glycerol for direct observation or dehydrated and mounted in Canada balsam for conservation.
Differential-display RT-PCR and amplified library. Nucleic acid extraction and purification were conducted as described by Sambrook et al. (48). Differential-display reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) was carried out as described by Villalobo et al. (57). A time-specific amplified cDNA library was prepared as follows. RNAs from 2-h excysting cells were extracted, and double-stranded cDNAs were obtained by following the procedures of the manufacturer (cDNA synthesis kit; Promega). A double-stranded adaptor was ligated to the cDNAs ends, and the excess adaptors were removed on a spin column. cDNAs were then PCR amplified by using the single-strand adaptor (5'-ATGCTTAGGAATTCCGATTTAGCCTCATA-3') as a primer, with 5 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Q-BioTaq; Appligene-Quantum) and 35 cycles of denaturation at 94°C for 1 min, annealing at 66°C for 1 min, and polymerization at 72°C for 3 min. The PCR products were run on a 1% (wt/vol) agarose gel in TBE (90 mM Tris, 90 mM boric acid, 2 mM EDTA [pH 8.3]), and fragments smaller than 400 bp were cut away; the gel was then run in the reverse orientation to concentrate the remaining fraction, which was cut out and purified by using the QIAquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen), according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Cloning, screening, and sequencing procedures. cDNAs obtained from either the differential-display RT-PCR or the amplified library, both with an A overhang resulting from PCR, were then cloned in pGEM-T Easy plasmid (Promega) at 4°C overnight and transformed into Escherichia coli XL1-Blue MRF' (Stratagene) by electroporation.
Library screening was carried out by hybridization of DNA from plated colonies with a [
-32P]dATP (Amersham)-labeled probe of cDNAs, constructed with RNAs extracted from 2-h excysting cells. Nucleic acid hybridization was conducted by standard methods. Clones of interest were isolated, and plasmids were extracted and purified by the conventional alkaline lysis method (48). Sequencing reactions with plasmid DNA were done with an automated sequencer (Vistra; Amersham) and the DNA cycle sequencing kit and Texas Red M13 universal primers (Amersham).
Inverse PCR. The ciliate nuclear organization is characterized by the presence of diploid micronuclei, containing the usual diploid chromosomes, and macronuclei which contain expressed genes embedded in minichromosomes. In hypotrich ciliates such as S. histriomuscorum, each minichromosome contains an open reading frame flanked by 5' leader and 3' tailer sequences and specific telomeres; this structure is then duplicated several times in order to produce about 1,900 copies of each sequence (43). This particular organization makes it possible to circularize these minichromosomes and to use the inverse-PCR technique to amplify and clone the whole minichromosome.
Total genomic DNA from S. histriomuscorum was covalently circularized by ligation, as previously described (57), and then 100 ng of circularized DNA was subjected to PCR in a 50-µl reaction mixture with the Expand long-template PCR system (Boehringer) according to the manufacturer's procedures and with 35 cycles of denaturation, annealing, and polymerization. The PCR products were run on a 1% (wt/vol) agarose gel, extracted and purified as described above, and then cloned in the pGEM-T Easy plasmid.
The sequences of the outward-facing specific primers used to amplify the macronuclear sequences corresponding to each fragment of interest were as follows: for the cathepsin B gene, 5'-TTGGATTTGGGCAACACCCTT-3' (upstream) and 5'-TAATCAGGTGTCTACACCCCA-3' (downstream); for the cathepsin L-like gene, 5'-CGTCTTTGATGCTCAACAAGCTGC-3' (upstream) and 5'-TTGAAGAATCCTTGGTCACCCC-3' (downstream); and for the calpain gene, 5'-AAGAGTGACAAGTGGAATGAC-3' (upstream) and 5'-ATCAGACCAATCTCCCATCC-3' (downstream).
RT-PCR. Total RNAs (2 µg) from cysts, 1-h excysting cells, and vegetative cells were reverse transcribed by using 3.5 µM random hexamers (pdN6; Amersham) as primers and 200 U of Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Eurobio) in a 20-µl reaction mixture containing 40 U of RNasin (Promega). RNA was incubated at 65°C for 5 min prior to the RT step. After 50 min at 37°C, the enzyme was inactivated at 95°C for 5 min. The PCR step was subsequently carried out with 0.1 and 0.3 µl of the RT product, a pair of specific primers, and 1.5 U of Taq polymerase in a 25-µl reaction mixture. The sequences of the forward and reverse primers were, respectively, as follows: for the cathepsin B gene, 5'-TTCTCCGACAGATTCGCC-3' and 5'-GTCGCATGAGAAGACTTG-3'; for the cathepsin L-like gene, 5'-TCAACTGTTGGTTGTGTT-3' and 5'-TGGGTAAGAGTTGCAGTT-3'; and for the calpain gene, 5'-AAACACTCCAGGCTCACAATG-3' and 5'-AAGAATTCTCAACTCCGGCAT-3'.
Sequence analysis and reconstruction of phylogenetic trees. The gapped BlastX program from the National Center for Biotechnology Information was used for searching protein identities. SMART software (34) was used to search domains in the predicted protein sequences. All sequences except S. histriomuscorum sequences were retrieved from GenBank to constitute a data set of 59 sequences for cathepsin B, 349 sequences for cathepsin-L like proteins, and 79 sequences for calpain. Management, formatting of the sequences for the tree-building programs, and construction of distance trees were carried out with the MUST package (41). Sequence alignments were manually performed with the ED program of the package. Cathepsin B and cathepsin L-like sequence data sets were disjoined in order to optimize the node resolution in each subtree for two reasons: first, they constitute two rather diverging branches in the general tree of cathepsin proteins (4, 60), and second, the number of unambiguously aligned characters in each subset (248 and 229, respectively, for cathepsin B and cathepsin L-like sequences) is much higher than it is in the two combined data sets (181). For legibility reasons, the final analysis retained only representatives of the main clusters in each tree, i.e., 37 sequences for cathepsin B, 72 for cathepsin L, and 41 for calpain. The distance matrix was calculated by considering all amino acid differences without weighting the transition probabilities. This matrix served as a basis for phylogenetic reconstructions by the neighbor-joining procedure (46). A 1,000-bootstrap resampling analysis was carried out with the Njboot program. Parsimony and maximum likelihood analyses were conducted for 100 bootstrap resamplings with the PROTPARS and PROML programs from the PHYLIP package (14); for the latter analysis, the Jones-Taylor-Thornton model was used with a constant rate of change among sites.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The nucleic acid and deduced amino acid sequences of the cathepsin B, cathepsin L-like, and calpain-like genes have been deposited in GenBank under accession numbers AY204512, AY204513, and AY204514, respectively.
| RESULTS |
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The sequences of these short cDNA inserts (about 400 bp) were used as anchoring sequences to design primers that were utilized with the inverse-PCR technique in order to clone the minichromosomes bearing the cathepsin B, the cathepsin L-like, and the calpain-like genes.
Effects of cysteine protease inhibitors. In order to confirm the involvement of cysteine protease molecules in the excystment process, the effects of several cysteine protease inhibitors were tested with growing, encysting, and excysting cells. We used L-trans-epoxysuccinyl peptides such as E64, CA-074, and its membrane-permeable derivative CA-074Me; peptide aldehydes such as MG132 (Cbz-Leu-Leu-leucinal) and calpain inhibitor II (N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-Met-aldehyde); and a natural inhibitor with a different structure, lactacystin. No inhibitor, whatever concentration was used (up to 1 mM), was able either to prevent or to delay cell division in a culture of growing cells or to block the encystment process in a nutriment-depleted medium. In contrast, E64, calpain inhibitor II, and MG132 were able to block the excystment at a specific stage after the onset of the cell differentiation process. Efficient inhibitor concentrations were determined by counting swimming vegetative cells, leading to a value of 10 µM for complete inhibition (Fig. 1). Cell observation during the experiments suggests that excystation started normally, as we witnessed a change of cyst refringency and the onset of contractile vacuole beating. Moreover, blocked cysts that were fixed and protargol impregnated display the ciliary "anlagen" as a whole on the cell cortex; that is, the basal body assembly is almost finished (Fig. 2). Washing the blocked cells with fresh medium lacking the inhibitor reactivated the excystment process and led to normally dividing cells. These results clearly show that the active inhibitors are responsible for a specific blockage of the excystment process and that the inhibition occurs at a late stage of excystation.
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Expression pattern. The RT-PCR patterns observed for the three cysteine proteases are displayed in Fig. 3. Cathepsin B mRNA is strongly expressed in vegetative growing cells which are actively dividing, while a relatively low expression level is observed in cysts and in 1-h excysting cells. Cathepsin L-like mRNA displays a pattern which appears as similar to that of cathepsin B, except that the expression level in vegetative cells is hardly greater than in cysts and 1-h excysting cells. Calpain mRNA is apparently absent in cysts and 1-h excysting cells but is strongly expressed in growing cells. These results suggest that the three cysteine proteases are active during the normal vegetative cell growth and that their expression, at least for cathepsin B and calpain, is upregulated during the excystment process; moreover, this expression is increased at least after 1 h of excystment induction, suggesting that upregulation occurs at a late stage after the onset of excystation, in agreement with the above observations concerning the effects of cysteine protease inhibitors.
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The deduced protein displays the usual structural characteristics of cathepsins, with a strongly conserved active site involving cysteine (C), histidine (H), and asparagine (N) residues (Fig. 4A); the propeptide region is 134 amino acids long and contains a signature sequence (Fig. 5) that is shared with mammalian cathepsin H and several plant cathepsins, to the exclusion of the other cathepsin L-like proteins. This signature sequence is known to remain attached to the mature enzyme in mammals (37) and is involved in the aminopeptidase activity of the enzyme. A structural analysis carried out with the SMART software (34) allowed the identification of a signal peptide of 19 amino acids located at the amino-terminal end of the molecule, with a putative cleavage site clearly positioned after a sequence of hydrophobic amino acids (MKTISASVLIILFSSLAMA/DV); the position of the cleavage site is in agreement with the rule (Ala-X-Ala located at positions -3 and -1) for bacterial signal peptidase I (58). This signal peptide is characteristic of molecules entering via the endoplasmic reticulum in the cell secretory pathway (38). Three N-glycosylation sites were detected with the NetNGlyc prediction server (R. Gupta et al., unpublished data), suggesting that a putative mannose-6-phosphate receptor pathway could be used for trafficking to lysosomes.
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The protein displays a conserved active site identical to that observed in cathepsin H (Fig. 4B); the propeptide region is 75 amino acids long, much shorter than the cathepsin H propeptide region. A signal peptide (MFKLVIIGTIVAVAVA/TH) was identified at the amino-terminal end of the molecule, here also following the bacterial rule for signal peptidase I cleavage. The mature peptide displays an important deletion in the so-called occluding loop, which is involved in the dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity of the enzyme; this deletion is also observed in the cathepsin B sequence of Giardia (Fig. 7), suggesting that both enzymes display solely the endopeptidase activity. Similar deletions are observed in plant cathepsin Bs and in some cathepsins from Caenorhabditis elegans. Only one putative N-glycosylation site was found in the propeptide domain, suggesting a relatively low-affinity binding with mannose-6-phosphate receptors and the possibility that this cathepsin B could be mostly excreted (12).
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The protein displays a cysteine protease domain located at the amino-terminal part of the molecule (Fig. 4C); the conserved active site of this domain is identical to those of cathepsins B and H. There is no signal peptide, suggesting a cytosolic location of the protein. Conventional calpains display a calpain III linker domain followed by a calcium-binding domain at the carboxy-terminal end of the molecule (51), but no such domain was found in the S. histriomuscorum sequence. However, an internal repeat was observed in the carboxy-terminal region, and the first repeat displays good similarity with the ciliate Eufolliculina uhligi calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase catalytic domains X and XI (36).
The neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree of calpain protein also displays paraphyletic clusters, among which are represented the known mammalian sequences (52) (Fig. 9). The position of the S. histriomuscorum sequence is poorly defined: in the neighbor-joining distance analysis, it is related to the Drosophila melanogaster sol (small optic lobes) protein, and in the parsimony analysis, it is related to plant calpains (63.7% bootstrap value); in the maximum likelihood analysis, no significant clustering is observed. Nevertheless, whatever the reconstruction method that was used, it clearly belongs to a larger phylogenetic group including plants, trypanosomes, fungal palB, and animal calpain 7, to the exclusion of the more conventional animal calpains. Sequences which so far have been more precisely characterized in this group (sol, palB, cap5.5, capn7, and Dek1) do not display the calcium-binding domain IV of conventional calpains.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The apparent absence of an effect of CA-074 and CA-074Me is rather surprising, since it was shown previously that cathepsin B is involved in the cyst wall breakdown of Giardia cysts (60). We may hypothesize that these inhibitors are unable either to enter the cell or to link their target, due to structural particularities. The first hypothesis can be rejected because the process of cyst wall breakdown implies extracellular secretion of cathepsin B, which then would be directly accessible to the inhibitor; this would result in an incomplete cell wall breakdown. On the other hand, S. histriomuscorum and Giardia molecules do not display the occluding loop which is specific to conventional cathepsin B proteins. Because histidine residues from this loop are essential for the inhibition specificity of CA-074 (55, 61), the CA-074 and CA-074Me molecules cannot be efficient in S. histriomuscorum cysts. Moreover, this should be extended to all cathepsin B molecules that do not possess an occluding loop. Finally, the absence of the occluding loop implies that cathepsin B works as an endopeptidase (the dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity is absent) in the process of cyst wall breakdown.
The blockage of excystment occurs at a specific stage: all ciliary anlagen are present in blocked cysts. Many arguments suggest that this stage could correspond to the commitment point of morphogenesis. In ciliates, whatever cycle is concerned (division, sexual cycle, regeneration, or excystment), the morphogenesis always proceeds through the same chronology: a new ciliature is assembled in the form of ciliary anlagen at specific locations on the cortex, and then all of these ciliary elements move on the cortex towards their specific location. All of these stages are well known during the fission cycle in many species (reviewed in references 18 and 20). Detailed studies performed with Paramecium (1) and Tetrahymena (17) have demonstrated that, as in metazoans, ciliates become committed to division at a specific stage; this stage is characterized by the presence of a complete set of ciliary organelles (1) and is thought to result from the classical cyclin/kinase cascade identified in metazoans (see reference 2 for a review). The fact that this stage could also correspond to a commitment point for excystment comes from studies on induced reencystment performed with excysting Oxytricha cells (25): excysting cells induced for reencystment before this point remain encysted, thus showing that the process of excystment is blocked. Cells which are induced for reencystment after this point carry on with excystation until the end of cortical morphogenesis but reencyst within the cyst wall, finally yielding two-walled cysts. Cysts blocked at the commitment point have also been described as the standard form of the resting cyst in one S. histriomuscorum-related species (16). This point, which marks the irreversibility of the process, is known to be sensitive to calpain inhibitors in metazoans (see reference 49 for a review), suggesting an involvement of calpains and proteasome in cyclin degradation. These data support the idea of the putative involvement of calpains in the process of excystment of S. histriomuscorum.
Structural and phylogenetic analyses suggest putative functions for the isolated cathepsins and calpain. The above discussion strongly suggests that cathepsin B is involved in the cyst wall breakdown process; while the mRNA differential-display technique may produce false-positive results, the isolated cathepsin H and calpain-like genes are not the conventional and abundant cathepsin L and capn1 (µ) or capn2 (m) calpain genes that would have been isolated in a cDNA random screening. We thus hypothesize that the three isolated molecules are the main inhibitor targets involved in the excystment process. If we consider their gene expression patterns, only the cathepsin B and calpain genes display a strong differential expression between the cyst and growing cell stages. Vegetative cells divide and encystment proceeds, apparently without any problem, whatever inhibitor has been added. This observation is similar to that for Giardia, in which cathepsin B is essential for the excystation to be achieved and the corresponding gene is strongly expressed in vegetative cells (60). This is not the case of Entamoeba, for which lactacystin blocks in vivo the encystment process (19). As was previously reported for Saccharomyces, we assume that during the vegetative growth, either the inhibitor is actively pumped out of the cell or inhibition is not complete (15, 32).
Cathepsin B, which we know enters the secretory pathway and could be mostly excreted, would be involved in the breakdown of the cyst wall, in a way similar to that observed for Giardia. It is noteworthy that the cluster most related to the S. histriomuscorum cathepsin B sequence is made up of sequences of tubulointerstitial nephritis antigen, a protein which is accumulated in the basement membrane and is able to promote the adhesion of epithelial cells (28, 30), i.e., a protein which is excreted and involved in cell wall remodeling. Concerning the related plant cluster, a recent study describes a molecule involved in cell wall remodeling by cleavage of cell wall structural proteins in Phleum pratense (24).
Cathepsin H also enters the secretory pathway and should be directed mostly to lysosomes through the mannose-6-phosphate receptor pathway. However, some of it also could be excreted in order to take part in the cell wall breakdown process. Cathepsin L-like proteins are involved in intracellular protein degradation throughout their lysosomal activity; outside lysosomes, their activity contributes to extracellular matrix remodeling and apoptosis (56). Cathepsin H expression is increased in several cancer diseases and could be involved in the degradation of extracellular matrix components, leading to cell proliferation, migration, and metastasis (59). On the other hand, plant cathepsin H-like proteins are strongly expressed during leaf senescence and seedling germination, but also following water stress (7, 21), and are regulated by the plant hormones gibberellic acid and abscissic acid (45). These data suggest that secreted S. histriomuscorum cathepsin H could participate in the cyst wall breakdown, even if there is no strong differential expression of this molecule during the excystment process.
The calpain-like molecule does not display EF hands (which are characteristic of the calcium-binding domains) in its carboxy-terminal part, but an internal repeat similar to a calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase domain has been found in this region. In the case of the conventional m-calpain, only one EF hand of the calcium-binding domain is strictly required for calcium-induced activation (13, 27). Moreover, the calpain-like tra-3 molecule displays a calcium-dependent protease activity, but lacks the EF hand domains (50). Although there is no formal evidence, these observations suggest that calcium ions could be involved in some way in the activation of the isolated S. histriomuscorum calpain. From other experiments, we also know that treatment of ionophore-permeabilized cysts with calcium ions is able to set off the excystment process, without any addition of some other nutriment (R. Lescasse, G. Fryd-Versavel, and A. Fleury, unpublished data). Thus, a release of calcium ions in the cyst cytoplasm could be a signal for calpain-like activation. In other respects, RT-PCR experiments have shown that the S. histriomuscorum calpain-like molecule is not expressed during the first stages of the excystment process, suggesting that a signal cascade might be involved in the gene expression. Phylogenetic considerations suggest a relationship with the sol protein from D. melanogaster and with the palB protein from Aspergillus. While the exact function of the sol protein is unknown, it has been shown that palB belongs to a signal transduction cascade which is sensitive to ambient pH (10, 51). At alkaline pH, the transcription factor pacC is proteolytically processed to a functional form which activates alkaline-expressed genes and represses acid-expressed genes. PalB is involved in the two-step proteolytic processing of pacC (11). On another hand, it is noteworthy that the S. histriomuscorum calpain-like molecule is phylogenetically more related to the plant Dek-1 protein than to conventional animal calpains. Dek-1 is developmentally regulated and is involved in plant signal transduction through maintenance of aleurone cell fate close to the outer endosperm cell layer (35). Together, these observations suggest that the S. histriomuscorum calpain-like protein could be involved in a signal transduction pathway yet to be defined and could be activated during the excystment process.
In conclusion, cysteine protease genes isolated from samples of mRNAs expressed during the excystment stage of the life cycle of S. histriomuscorum are not the conventional cathepsin B and L, capn1 (µ), or capn2 (m) calpain genes. Inhibitors affect only the excystment process, to the exclusion of the dividing vegetative cell cycle. We speculate that cathepsins are involved in the cell wall breakdown process and that the calpain-like protein might be involved in a signal transduction pathway in relation to a cytoplasmic release of calcium ions; future work will focus on the characterization of the elements of this putative pathway.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the Université de Paris-Sud. E.V. was the recipient of a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellowship from the EC (contract number ERBFMBICT 983187).
| FOOTNOTES |
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Present address: Departamento de Microbiologia, Facultad de Biologia, Universidad de Sevilla, Seville, Spain. ![]()
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