Make It, Take It, or Leave It: Heme Metabolism of Parasites
article has not abstract
Published in the journal:
. PLoS Pathog 9(1): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1003088
Category:
Pearls
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003088
Summary
article has not abstract
Heme and other tetrapyrroles, often called “the colors of life”, belong to the most important molecules of almost all extant organisms. They are synthesized by a common multistep pathway that is highly conserved throughout the tree of life [1]. One of the tetrapyrrole products is chlorophyll, the green pigment of plants and other phototrophs, which captures the energy of the sun. Vitamin B12, the most complex tetrapyrrole, is involved in DNA synthesis and energy metabolism [2]. The major product of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis in non-photosynthetic organisms is heme, an iron-coordinated porphyrin with the capacity to transfer electrons and bind diatomic gases. Here we summarize the current understanding of different aspects of heme metabolism in parasitic eukaryotes, including the synthesis and uptake of heme and its detoxification. A differential need for heme in distinct parasitic groups and the suitability of heme metabolism as a drug target for treating parasite-borne diseases are also discussed. First, however, let us review the functions of heme in various cellular processes.
What Are the Functions of Heme and How Does It Relate to Parasites?
Probably the best known function of heme is the transport of oxygen as part of the hemoglobin molecule, which gives the red color to blood. Unicellular organisms do not need to transport oxygen throughout tissues, but may still use globins or other hemoproteins to sense diatomic gases and to avoid oxidative or nitrosative stress [3]. This might have a major impact for the life cycles of parasites, as the immune response of their hosts is often based on the production of reactive oxygen (ROS) or nitrogen species. Furthermore, many parasites adapted to anaerobic environments, with oxygen being toxic to them. Some anaerobic parasites possess flavohemoglobin or other hemoproteins, which have either the capacity to consume nitric oxide and oxygen or serve as signal transducers upon their binding [4] (Table 1).
The fact that heme iron can exist in either a reduced or oxidized state relates to most functions of heme participating in electron-transport systems and redox reactions within the cell. All organisms obtaining energy via oxidative phosphorylation need large amounts of heme for the cytochromes of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Cytochromes of the b5 or P450 families transfer electrons in reactions such as desaturation of fatty acids, detoxification of various drugs, or biosynthesis of sterols [5]. As a component of peroxidases and catalases, heme is able to consume hydrogen peroxide and therefore has a great impact on the ROS balance. Although these enzymes are likely crucial for the protection of parasites from the oxidative burst of their hosts, their activities may also have a negative impact on their virulence, since the host's ROS production serves as a signal during the parasites' life cycles [6]. Due to the important roles of heme in the elementary cellular processes of most organisms, heme metabolism is considered a promising target for new anti-parasitic drugs [7], [8]. Recently, biosynthesis of heme has been suggested as a promising target for treating malaria, since its causative agent Plasmodium uses a unique route of heme synthesis [9]. To demonstrate how this pathway evolved, we first describe how heme biosynthesis looks in other eukaryotes.
How Is Heme Synthesized and How Do Parasites Obtain It?
Most organisms are able to synthesize their own heme in a pathway in which the first committed precursor, δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), is converted to heme by seven universally conserved enzymatic steps. Archaea and most bacteria synthesize ALA from glutamate (C5 pathway), while α-proteobacteria do it by condensation of succinyl-CoA with glycine (C4 pathway) [1] (Figure 1A). Heme biosynthesis in eukaryotes has largely been influenced by endosymbioses, resulting in the evolution of mitochondria and plastids. Primary heterotrophic eukaryotes clearly combined the original synthetic pathway of the pre-eukaryotic host with that of the α-proteobacterial predecessor of mitochondrion, resulting in an evolutionary mosaic pathway [10]. This pathway spans both the cytosol and the mitochondrion, where heme is mostly needed for respiratory cytochromes (Figure 1A). Photosynthetic eukaryotes acquired another tetrapyrrole synthesis pathway from the engulfed cyanobacterium transformed to a primary plastid, or from a eukaryotic alga already possessing a plastid evolving into a secondary plastid. The plastidial pathway serves mainly for the synthesis of chlorophyll, which is required in much greater amounts than heme. Uniquely, both the mitochondrion-cytosolic and the plastidial pathways co-exist in Euglena gracilis, which acquired its plastid through a secondary endosymbiosis relatively recently (Figures 1A, 1C, and 2) [11]. In most other phototrophs, the plastidial pathway took over tetrapyrrole synthesis and the original pathway of the host cell disappeared [10]–[12].
Apicomplexan parasites possess a most unusual type of heme synthesis, as it spans three cellular compartments and uses enzymes of various origins (Figure 1A). The photosynthetic ancestry of apicomplexans is well known. These parasites retain a relic secondary plastid, called the apicoplast, which is still required for the syntheses of isoprenoids, fatty acids, and heme [13]. Recent characterization of the heme synthesis pathway of apicomplexans, as well as that of chromerids, their photosynthetic relatives [10] (Figure 1B), revealed that in both lineages the mitochondrion-cytosolic pathway of the host and the plastidial pathway of the endosymbiont contributed to their unusual tetrapyrrole pathways (Figures 1A and 1C). In Chromera velia, the synthesis starts with the heterotrophic C4 pathway in the mitochondrion, but both heme and chlorophyll are produced in the photosynthetic plastid. However, having no need for these products in their non-photosynthetic plastids, apicomplexans redirected the last steps of the synthesis to the cytosol and mitochondrion, where heme is produced mainly for respiration [10] (Figure 1C).
In contrast to the apicomplexans, many other parasitic groups have lost the capacity to synthesize heme (Figure 2). The colonization of anaerobic environments, which makes heme synthesis impossible because of the two oxygen-requiring steps in the pathway, was probably one of the reasons for this loss. Although some bacteria are known to possess oxygen-independent analogs of these enzymes [1], so far they have never been found together in any eukaryote (unpublished data). Moreover, the anaerobes need only a little heme for the few heme proteins they encode in their genome (Table 1), and it is perhaps easier to obtain it from their hosts. Easy access to heme from external sources was likely the reason why even some aerobes, which need heme for mitochondrial respiration and oxygen metabolism in general, lost the heme synthesis pathway. The accumulation of either heme or its precursors leads to the production of ROS and cell damage [14], and it is therefore advantageous to get rid of heme synthesis whenever possible. These organisms must have evolved mechanisms of heme acquisition, such as heme binding proteins and porphyrin membrane transporters. At present very little is known about such transporters [15]–[17], while the mechanism of heme import into the mitochondria of heme auxotrophs remains unknown.
The evolution of heme acquisition within the group Kinetoplastea, which includes serious human parasites of the genera Trypanosoma and Leishmania (Figures 1A and 1C), is very interesting. These protists likely lost the pathway before they became parasites, since even the basal free-living bodonids lack a heme synthesis pathway and acquire heme from the bacteria they feed on [18], [19]. Trypanosomes are heme auxotrophs, taking up heme from the host, while Leishmania and insect trypanosomatids may use later precursors of heme synthesis as well, as they encode enzymes for the last three steps of the pathway. The genes involved have been acquired from γ-proteobacteria by lateral gene transfer (LGT) [18]. In addition, some insect trypanosomatids harbor bacterial endosymbionts that supply them with heme or its precursors, thus resembling organelles [18], [19]. The evolution of heme synthesis in kinetoplastids thus went in the opposite direction than in most parasitic lineages. Although in kinetoplastids many metabolic pathways have been reduced or lost due to their parasitic lifestyle, heme synthesis has been rescued from complete absence in their ancestors to a fully functional biosynthetic pathway in the endosymbiont-containing insect trypanosomatids.
Do All Parasites Require Heme?
The requirement for heme usually correlates with the simplification of a parasites' metabolism and with the presence of oxygen in their environment. As most heme functions relate to oxygen in one way or another, anaerobic species possess only a very few hemoproteins (Table 1), mostly involved in sensing diatomic gases and avoiding oxidative and nitrosative stresses. Microsporidia, intracellular parasites related to fungi, greatly simplified their metabolism. They possess the smallest known eukaryotic genomes and obtain most nutrients from the host cells [20]. Encephalitozoon cuniculi seems to encode only one hemoprotein, a member of the cytochrome b5 family of unknown function, while Antonospora lacustae also possesses catalase, which is active in the dormant stage [21] (Table 1). Although no heme protein is listed in Table 1 for Entamoeba, this amoeboid human parasite secretes two proteins that bind heme in vitro. However, they were suggested to scavenge for heme not for heme itself but because of the requirement for iron [22]. Thus the possibility remains that this anaerobe is totally devoid of heme proteins.
The aforementioned parasites are biotrophs that cannot be cultivated in chemically defined media, meaning that their dependence on heme cannot be rigorously tested. The only known eukaryote able to prosper without heme is the kinetoplastid parasite of plants Phytomonas [23]. Surprisingly, this aerobe retains several cellular processes normally involving heme. Phytomonas is still able to desaturate fatty acids, likely using an alternative electron donor. The heme-requiring respiratory complexes are bypassed by an alternative oxidase, and sterol biosynthesis can be stopped before the heme-requiring demethylation step. Ergosterol, which is normally synthesized in the presence of heme, can be substituted with its precursor, lanosterol, without any effect on the in vitro growth of this flagellate [23]. Although the use of heme likely provides some advantage at least in part of its life cycle, this organism is living proof that even under aerobic conditions all heme functions can potentially be lost or bypassed when so much energy is provided by glycolysis that oxidative phosphorylation-derived ATP is not required.
How Do Parasites Cope with Heme Toxicity?
While useful for many cellular processes, free heme induces the production of ROS and causes lipid peroxidation, resulting in membrane injury and cell apoptosis [14]. The large quantities of heme released during hemoglobin digestion are a particular challenge faced by parasites dwelling in or feeding on blood. These parasites have evolved various detoxification mechanisms, including the breakdown of heme into molecular iron and less reactive intermediates, the containment of heme by a physical barrier, and the conversion of heme into an inert crystalline structure [14]. The formation of hemozoin, a single unit heme polymer, by Plasmodium is well known, but this mechanism has also been described in the blood-feeding human parasitic worms Schistosoma spp. and in blood-sucking triatomine bugs [8]. A slightly different strategy is employed by ticks, which accumulate heme as a non-crystalline aggregate in a specialized organelle called hemosome [14]. The ability to break heme is still questionable for many parasites. It is normally executed by heme oxygenase (HO), which leads to the production of biliverdin that is further metabolized to bilirubin, a non-toxic water-soluble pigment. Although HO has recently been identified in Plasmodium [24], its presence or absence remains unknown for many parasites, including kinetoplastids. Leishmania seem to be able to break down heme to be used as a source of iron [25], while the heme and iron acquisition pathways are likely independent in other parasites [26].
Is Heme Metabolism a Good Drug Target?
Heme synthesis is present only in certain parasites and was regarded as a potential drug target mainly for Plasmodium and other apicomplexans, where it partially localizes to the apicoplast. However, it has been shown recently that of the three plastid-localized pathways only isoprenoid synthesis is indispensable for the erythrocytic stage, since addition of isopentenyl pyrophosphate chemically rescues an elimination of the apicoplast in Plasmodium [27]. Heme that is still required in this life stage can potentially be acquired from the host blood or synthesized using host-derived enzymes [28]. Other Plasmodium life stages are likely dependent on their own biosynthetic pathway. In contrast, the anaerobic Cryptosporidium, and likely some gregarines, have lost the capacity to synthesize heme, and a detectable apicoplast is absent from their cells as well [10], [28]. This indicates that it is the need to synthesize heme which prevents this organelle from being lost. Nevertheless, we argue that Plasmodium heme synthesis is not a suitable drug target. On the other hand, the pathway of heme detoxification proved to be an excellent therapeutic target for malaria and other parasites. The antimalarial quinoline, for example, limits intra-erythrocytic parasite growth by inhibiting hemozoin formation and is also effective against Schistosoma [8], [28].
Although no kinetoplastid can synthesize heme using early precursors, Leishmania spp. encode the last three steps of the synthesis, while the first five enzymes of the pathway are absent [18], [29] (Figure 1C). It remains to be tested whether these enzymes are really used for the conversion of the host-derived coproporphyrinogen into heme. If so, protoporphyrinogen oxidase would be a promising drug target, as Leishmania spp. and some other trypanosomatids are the only known eukaryotes that possess the bacterial enzyme, which differs from the eukaryotic analog not only in its sequence, but also in its mechanism of action. This step of heme synthesis has been successfully targeted in plants by various herbicides causing the accumulation of porphyrins, which upon exposure to light trigger oxidative damage [30]. The same principle is also used in cancer treatment by photodynamic therapy.
The fact that it is necessary for heme auxotrophs to import heme via specialized transporters provides other potential drug targets, as exemplified by the essentiality of the recently identified porphyrin importer in Leishmania [16]. A specific haptoglobin-hemoglobin receptor that mediates heme uptake has been described in the bloodstream stage of Trypanosoma brucei [15]. However, contrary to Leishmania, which requires substantial amounts of heme for mitochondrial respiration, this life stage of T. brucei relies on glycolysis as the sole energy source. The inaccessibility of heme in vivo resulted in decreased growth caused by higher sensitivity to oxidative stress, likely due to a change in the membrane lipid composition. Inhibition of the key enzymes of macrophage oxidative burst rescued the parasite growth [15], indicating that heme may not be required for the viability of this life stage of T. brucei, the metabolism of which is similar to the related Phytomonas. This would make the pathway of heme uptake in T. brucei a less attractive drug target, similar to the heme synthesis pathway of the erythrocytic stage of Plasmodium.
Zdroje
1. PanekH, O'BrianMR (2002) A whole genome view of prokaryotic haem biosynthesis. Microbiology 148: 2273–2282.
2. RothJR, LawrenceJG, BobikTA (1996) Cobalamin (coenzyme B12): synthesis and biological significance. Annu Rev Microbiol 50: 137–181.
3. PooleRK, HughesMN (2000) New functions for the ancient globin family: bacterial responses to nitric oxide and nitrosative stress. Mol Microbiol 36: 775–783.
4. RaffertyS, LuuB, MarchRE, YeeJ (2010) Giardia lamblia encodes a functional flavohemoglobin. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 399: 347–351.
5. SchenkmanJB, JanssonI (2003) The many roles of cytochrome b5. Pharmacol Ther 97: 139–152.
6. PalS, DolaiS, YadavRK, AdakS (2010) Ascorbate peroxidase from Leishmania major controls the virulence of infective stage of promastigotes by regulating oxidative stress. PLoS ONE 5: e11271 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0011271
7. WuB, NovelliJ, FosterJ, VaisvilaR, ConwayL, et al. (2009) The heme biosynthetic pathway of the obligate Wolbachia endosymbiont of Brugia malayi as a potential anti-filarial drug target. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 3: e475 doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0000475
8. OliveiraMF, d'AvilaJC, TemponeAJ, SoaresJB, RumjanekFD, et al. (2004) Inhibition of heme aggregation by chloroquine reduces Schistosoma mansoni infection. J Infect Dis 190: 843–52.
9. HuthmacherC, HoppeA, BulikS, HolzhütterHG (2010) Antimalarial drug targets in Plasmodium falciparum predicted by stage-specific metabolic network analysis. BMC Syst Biol 4: 120.
10. KořenýL, SobotkaR, JanouškovecJ, KeelingPJ, OborníkM (2011) Tetrapyrrole synthesis of photosynthetic chromerids is likely homologous to the unusual pathway of apicomplexan parasites. Plant Cell 23: 3454–3462.
11. KořenýL, OborníkM (2011) Sequence evidence for the presence of two tetrapyrrole pathways in Euglena gracilis. Genome Biol Evol 3: 359–364.
12. OborníkM, GreenBR (2005) Mosaic origin of the heme biosynthesis pathway in photosynthetic eukaryotes. Mol Biol Evol 22: 2343–2353.
13. RalphSA, van DoorenGG, WallerRF, CrawfordMJ, FraunholzMJ, et al. (2004) Tropical infectious diseases: metabolic maps and functions of the Plasmodium falciparum apicoplast. Nat Rev Microbiol 2: 203–216.
14. TohSQ, GlanfieldA, GobertGN, JonesMK (2010) Heme and blood-feeding parasites: friends or foes? Parasit Vectors 18: 108.
15. VanhollebekeB, De MuylderG, NielsenMJ, PaysA, TebabiP, et al. (2008) A haptoglobin–hemoglobin receptor conveys innate immunity to Trypanosoma brucei in humans. Science 320: 677–681.
16. HuynhC, YuanX, MiguelDC, RenbergRL, ProtchenkoO, et al. (2012) Heme uptake by Leishmania amazonensis is mediated by the transmembrane protein LHR1. PLoS Pathog 8: e1002795 doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002795
17. ChenC, SamuelTK, KrauseM, DaileyHA, HamzaI (2012) Heme utilization in the Caenorhabditis elegans hypodermal cells is facilitated by heme-responsive gene-2. J Biol Chem 287: 9601–9612.
18. KořenýL, LukešJ, OborníkM (2010) Evolution of the haem synthetic pathway in kinetoplastid flagellates: an essential pathway that is not essential after all? Int J Parasitol 40: 149–156.
19. AlvesJM, VoegtlyL, MatveyevAV, LaraAM, da SilvaFM, et al. (2011) Identification and phylogenetic analysis of heme synthesis genes in trypanosomatids and their bacterial endosymbionts. PLoS ONE 6: e23518 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0023518
20. CorradiN, PombertJF, FarinelliL, DidierES, KeelingPJ (2010) The complete sequence of the smallest known nuclear genome from the microsporidian Encephalitozoon intestinalis. Nat Commun 1: 77.
21. FastNM, LawJS, WilliamsBA, KeelingPJ (2003) Bacterial catalase in the microsporidian Nosema locustae: implications for microsporidian metabolism and genome evolution. Eukaryot Cell 2: 1069–1075.
22. Cruz-CastañedaA, López-CasamichanaM, Olivares-TrejoJJ (2011) Entamoeba histolytica secretes two haem-binding proteins to scavenge haem. Biochem J 434: 105–111.
23. KořenýL, SobotkaR, KovářováJ, GnipováA, FlegontovP, et al. (2012) Aerobic kinetoplastid flagellate Phytomonas does not require heme for viability. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 109: 3808–3813.
24. OkadaK (2009) The novel heme oxygenase-like protein from Plasmodium falciparum converts heme to bilirubin IXα in the apicoplast. FEBS Lett 583: 313–319.
25. CarvalhoS, CruzT, SantarémN, CastroH, CostaV, et al. (2009) Heme as a source of iron to Leishmania infantum amastigotes. Acta Trop 109: 131–135.
26. HajdušekO, SojkaD, KopáčekP, BurešováV, FrantaZ, et al. (2009) Knockdown of proteins involved in iron metabolism limits tick reproduction and development. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106: 1033–1038.
27. YehE, DeRisiJL (2011) Chemical rescue of malaria parasites lacking an apicoplast defines organelle function in blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum. PLoS Biol 9: e1001138 doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001138
28. van DoorenGG, KennedyAT, McFaddenGI (2012) The use and abuse of heme in apicomplexan parasites. Antioxid Redox Signal 17: 634–656.
29. DuttaS, FuruyamaK, SassaS, ChangK-P (2008) Leishmania spp.: Delta-aminolevulinate-inducible neogenesis of porphyria by genetic complementation of incomplete heme biosynthesis pathway. Exp Parasitol 118: 629–636.
30. MatsumotoH, KashimotoY, WarabiE (1999) Basis for common chickweed (Stellaria media) tolerance to oxyfluorfen. Pestic Biochem Physiol 64: 47–53.
Štítky
Hygiena a epidemiologie Infekční lékařství LaboratořČlánek vyšel v časopise
PLOS Pathogens
2013 Číslo 1
- Perorální antivirotika jako vysoce efektivní nástroj prevence hospitalizací kvůli COVID-19 − otázky a odpovědi pro praxi
- Stillova choroba: vzácné a závažné systémové onemocnění
- Diagnostický algoritmus při podezření na syndrom periodické horečky
- Jak souvisí postcovidový syndrom s poškozením mozku?
- Diagnostika virových hepatitid v kostce – zorientujte se (nejen) v sérologii
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
- Biosafety Level-4 Laboratories in Europe: Opportunities for Public Health, Diagnostics, and Research
- Loss and Retention of RNA Interference in Fungi and Parasites
- Innate Sensing of Chitin and Chitosan
- Make It, Take It, or Leave It: Heme Metabolism of Parasites