Peroxins 5 and 7 are receptors for protein import into the peroxisomal matrix. We studied the involvement of these peroxins in the biogenesis of glycosomes in the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei. Glycosomes are peroxisome-like organelles in which a major part of the glycolytic pathway is sequestered. We here report the characterization of the T. brucei homologue of PEX7 and provide several data strongly suggesting that it can bind to PEX5. Depletion of PEX5 or PEX7 by RNA interference had a severe effect on the growth of both the bloodstream-form of the parasite, that relies entirely on glycolysis for its ATP supply, and the procyclic form representative of the parasite living in the tsetse-fly midgut and in which also other metabolic pathways play a prominent role. The role of the two receptors in import of glycosomal matrix proteins with different types of peroxisome/glycosome-targeting signals (PTS) was analyzed by immunofluorescence and subcellular fractionation studies. Knocking down the expression of either receptor gene resulted, in procyclic cells, in the mislocalization of proteins with both a type 1 or 2 targeting motif (PTS1, PTS2) located at the C- and N-termini, respectively, and proteins with a sequence-internal signal (I-PTS) to the cytosol. Electron microscopy confirmed the apparent integrity of glycosomes in these procyclic cells. In bloodstream-form trypanosomes, PEX7 depletion seemed to affect only the subcellular distribution of PTS2-proteins. Western blot analysis suggested that, in both life-cycle stages of the trypanosome, the levels of both receptors are controlled in a coordinated fashion, by a mechanism that remains to be determined. The observation that both PEX5 and PEX7 are essential for the viability of the parasite indicates that the respective branches of the glycosome-import pathway in which each receptor acts might be interesting drug targets.
Peroxisomes, glyoxysomes and glycosomes are related organelles found in different organisms. The morphology and enzymic content of the different members of this organelle family differ considerably, and may also be highly dependent on the cell's environmental conditions or life cycle. However, all peroxisome-like organelles have in common a number of characteristic enzymes or enzyme systems, notably enzymes dealing with reactive oxygen species. All organelles of the family follow essentially the same route of biogenesis, but with species-specific differences. Sets of proteins called peroxins are involved in different aspects of the formation and proliferation of peroxisomes such as import of proteins in the organellar matrix, insertion of proteins in the membrane, etc. In different eukaryotic lineages these functions are carried out by often--but not always--homologous yet poorly conserved peroxins. The process of biogenesis and the nature of the proteins involved suggest that all members of the peroxisome family evolved from a single organelle in an ancestral eukaryotic cell. This original peroxisome was possibly derived from a cellular membrane system such as the endoplasmic reticulum. Most of the organism-specific functions of the extant organelles have been acquired later in evolution.
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