Identification of Trypanosoma brucei human serum sensitivity determinants by RNAi library selection

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (2017). Identification of Trypanosoma brucei human serum sensitivity determinants by RNAi library selection. [Dataset]. European Nucleotide Archive. https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/PRJEB23776
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Trypanosoma brucei brucei causes nagana in livestock but fails to infect humans, while T. b. gambiense and T. b. rhodesiense cause sleeping sickness in humans. T. b. brucei fails to infect humans because it is sensitive to innate immune complexes found in normal human serum known as trypanolytic factor (TLF) 1 and 2. Our understanding of factors that render T. b. brucei susceptible to lysis by human serum remains incomplete. We conducted a genome-scale RNA interference (RNAi) library screen for reduced sensitivity to human serum. Among only four high-confidence 'hits' were all three genes previously shown to sensitize T. b. brucei to human serum, the haptoglobin-haemoglobin receptor (HpHbR), inhibitor of cysteine peptidase (ICP) and the lysosomal protein, p67, thereby demonstrating the pivotal roles these factors play. The fourth gene identified encodes a predicted protein with eleven trans-membrane domains. Using chemical and genetic approaches, we show that ICP sensitizes T. b. brucei to human serum by modulating the essential cathepsin, CATL, a lysosomal cysteine peptidase. A second cathepsin, CATB, likely to be dispensable for growth in in vitro culture, has little or no impact on human-serum sensitivity. Our findings reveal major and novel determinants of human-serum sensitivity in T. b. brucei. They also shed light on the lysosomal protein-protein interactions that render T. b. brucei exquisitely sensitive to lytic factors in human serum, and indicate that CATL, an important potential drug target, has the capacity to resist these factors.

Additional Information

Secondary Study Accession: ERP105554

Keywords

Trypanosoma brucei

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