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Eukaryotic Cell, January 2006, p. 203-206, Vol. 5, No. 1
1535-9778/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.5.1.203-206.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Heterologous Expression of an Entamoeba histolytica Chitin Synthase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Katrina L. Van Dellen,1,
Dorota A. Bulik,1,
Charles A. Specht,2
Phillips W. Robbins,1 and
John C. Samuelson1*
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Boston University Goldman School of Dental Medicine,1
Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 021182
Received 30 November 2004/
Accepted 11 January 2005

ABSTRACT
Chitin in the cyst wall of
Entamoeba histolytica is made by
two chitin synthases (Chs), one of which is unique (EhCHS-1)
and one of which resembles those of insects and nematodes (EhCHS-2).
EhCHS-1 is deposited chitin in the lateral wall of transformed
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Chs mutants, independent of accessory
proteins (Chs4p to Chs7p) required by yeast Chs3p.

TEXT
Chitin, the ß1,4-linked polymer of
N-acetylglucosamine
(GlcNAc), is present in fungi, insects, nematodes, and
Entamoeba species (reviewed in references
17,
18, and
21). Chitin synthases
(Chs) are highly variable proteins which contain a conserved
catalytic domain bordered by multiple transmembrane helices
(TMHs) (
18,
21). Phylogenetic analyses have found support for
two major divisions (or families) of Chs (
17,
18). Division
I includes oomycete Chs and fungal Chs classes I to III, while
division II includes fungal Chs classes IV and V along with
insect and nematode Chs. In
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, different
pools of chitin are produced from cytosolic UDP-GlcNAc by three
specialized chitin synthases (Chs1p to Chs3p) that differ in
optimum pH, cation dependence, zymogenic behavior, and susceptibility
to inhibitors (reviewed in references
5,
8,
15, and
17). Chs1p
acts as a repair enzyme at the time of cytokinesis; Chs2p makes
the chitin in the primary septum that separates mother and daughter
cells, while Chs3p makes the bulk of cellular chitin, including
the chitin along the lateral cell wall and in the ring that
forms at the base of an emerging bud. Chs3p requires several
accessory proteins either for its catalytic activity (Chs4p),
trafficking, and targeting to the plasma membrane (Chs5p and
Chs6p) or for exit from the endoplasmic reticulum (Chs7p) (
17).
The infectious form of Entamoeba histolytica, the protist that causes amebic colitis and liver abscesses, is a cyst that contains chitin in its wall (1, 2). Because E. histolytica does not encyst when grown axenically in vitro, most laboratory studies of encystation use the reptilian parasite Entamoeba invadens, which can easily be induced to encyst in vitro by osmotic shock, glucose deprivation, or a combination of the two (4, 19, 24). The most abundant protein in the E. invadens cyst wall is Jacob, a lectin with five unique chitin-binding domains that cross-link chitin fibrils (14). E. invadens also has an encystation-specific chitinase that contains a unique chitin-binding domain that is distinct from those of the Jacob lectin (11, 23).
Encystation of E. invadens can be blocked by the addition of the Chs inhibitors polyoxin D and nikkomycin (3). Das and Gillin have previously studied two E. invadens Chs activities, described as "soluble" and "particulate" because they were associated with the supernatant or pellet, respectively, resulting from high-speed (100,000 x g) centrifugation of cell extracts (9). Campos-Góngora et al. have previously determined the primary structures of two E. histolytica Chs: EhCHS-1, which is 642 amino acids long with 7 predicted TMHs, and EhCHS-2, which is 980 amino acids long with 17 predicted TMHs (7). mRNAs encoding E. invadens Chs (EiCHS-1 and EiCHS-2) are each up-regulated during encystation, paralleling increases in chitin synthase activity and chitin formation during encystation (7, 9). We also found that EiCHS-1 and EiCHS-2 mRNA levels increase during encystation, while EhCHS-1, but not EhCHS-2, mRNAs were made by cultured E. histolytica trophozoites (data not shown).
The present study attempted to answer three additional questions concerning chitin synthases of entamoebae. First, what are the origins of EhCHS-1 and EhCHS-2? Do they represent gene duplications by entamoebae or do they share common ancestry with Chs of fungi, insects, or nematodes? Second, can we complement S. cerevisiae Chs mutants with EhCHS-1 and EhCHS-2? If so, is the amebic Chs function dependent upon accessory proteins of yeast (Chs4p to Chs7p)? Third, what are the catalytic properties of an Entamoeba Chs expressed in the yeast mutant?
EhCHS-1 is unique, while EhCHS-2 belongs to a clade of insect and nematode chitin synthases.
Four inferences were derived from our phylogenetic analysis of the relationship of the Entamoeba Chs to representative Chs from fungi, insects, and nematodes (Fig. 1) (10, 12, 13, 20, 22). First, gene duplication, if it occurred in Entamoeba, occurred long before the divergence of E. histolytica and E. invadens. EhCHS-1 and EiCHS-1 were monophyletic, as were EhCHS-2 and EiCHS-2, but there was no support for a clade containing all of the Entamoeba Chs. Second, there was strong support for a clade containing Entamoeba CHS-2 and insect and nematode Chs. Like insect and nematode Chs, EhCHS-2 contains numerous TMHs (17 in total) on both sides of the catalytic domain as well as a conserved octapeptide (CATMYHET) that is N terminal to the catalytic domain (7, 25). Third, the relationship of Entamoeba CHS-1 to other Chs was not resolved in this analysis, suggesting that EhCHS-1 is unique. However, the number of TMHs (7) in EhCHS-1 (but not the exact arrangement) is similar to those observed in many fungal Chs (6, 7). With a predicted length of 642 amino acids, EhCHS-1 is also significantly shorter than other reported Chs, which range between 738 and 1,869 amino acids in length (18). Fourth, our analysis did not find support for the two divisions of Chs that were previously identified (17, 18). There was strong bootstrap support for a clade containing oomycetes and fungal Chs classes I to III as well as a clade containing fungal Chs classes IV and V. However, the relationship between these two fungal clades and the mixed clade containing Entamoeba CHS-2 and insect and nematode Chs was not well resolved, suggesting that there may be three families or divisions of eukaryotic Chs.
EhCHS-1 functions in budding yeast independent of accessory proteins.
To test the function of the
E. histolytica Chs, an
S. cerevisiae chs1/
chs3 double mutant strain created in the BY4741 background
was transformed with a multicopy pYES2.1-TOPO plasmid (Invitrogen
Corp., Carlsbad, CA) containing either EhCHS-1 or EhCHS-2 under
the control of a galactose-inducible promoter. A c-
myc sequence
and stop codon were included in the reverse PCR primer used
to amplify the
Entamoeba genes for cloning. Yeast transformants
were grown in minimal synthetic medium without uracil supplemented
with 2% glucose to an optical density at 600 nm of 1.5 to 2.
Protein expression was induced by switching to synthetic medium
containing 2% galactose. After 2 to 6 h of induction, mRNAs
of both EhCHS-1 and EhCHS-2 were detected in the transformed
yeast by reverse transcription-PCR, and their respective protein
products were detected by immunoblotting with an anti-c-
myc antibody. For reasons that are not clear, EhCHS-1, but not EhCHS-2,
was found to be functional in this system. Chitin was detected
by calcofluor white M2R staining in cells transformed by the
EhCHS-1 plasmid but not the EhCHS-2 plasmid or the empty vector.
Chitin deposition by EhCHS-1 appeared to be restricted to the
lateral cell wall; no chitin was detected as a ring in the bud
scars of mother cells (Fig.
2). Chitin levels in cells expressing
EhCHS-1 were also assayed directly using a modified Morgan-Elson
method adapted to 96-well plates (
6). After 6 h of induction,
the amount of chitin deposited in the cell wall reached a maximum
of 8.5 ± 1.7 nmol GlcNAc/mg cells, which was 2 to 2.5
times higher than the amount of chitin in the wild-type parent
strain (3.9 ± 0.4 nmol GlcNAc/mg cells). In order to
determine if EhCHS-1, which is clearly functional in
S. cerevisiae without any auxiliary
Entamoeba proteins, uses any of the yeast
accessory proteins (Chs4p to Chs7p) for its activity or trafficking,
chitin levels were assayed in yeast Chs deletion mutations (
chs3,
chs4,
chs5,
chs6, and
chs7) in the BY4741 background (Research
Genetics, Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA) transformed with EhCHS-1::pYES2.1-TOPO.
Figure
3 shows that EhCHS-1 made virtually the same amount of
chitin regardless of which background was used, suggesting that
the yeast Chs3 accessory proteins are not required for EhCHS-1
activity.
Catalytic properties of EhCHS-1.
The catalytic properties of EhCHS-1 expressed in the
chs1/
chs3 double mutant were examined using a previously described colorimetric
assay for Chs activity in cell extracts of
S. cerevisiae (
16).
Cells were induced for 6 h in synthetic medium containing 2%
galactose, lysed in the presence of a fungal protease inhibitor
cocktail, and subjected to high-speed centrifugation (55,000
x g) over a 10% (wt/wt) sucrose cushion to prepare a total membrane
fraction for the assays. The basic assay reaction mixture contained
100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 10 mM Mg
2+, and 10 mM UDP-GlcNAc. Reactions
were performed for 1 h at 30°C. Pretreatment of membranes
with trypsin was not found to have a significant effect on EhCHS-1
activity, so we performed our assays with untreated membranes.
This allowed us to independently assay EhCHS-1 activity in the
presence of yeast Chs2p, which has negligible activity unless
membranes are pretreated with trypsin. The total specific activity
of EhCHS-1 (27.8 ± 2.2 nmol GlcNAc/h/mg protein) in the
membrane fraction of the
chs1/
chs3 mutant was slightly higher
than Chs3 activity in wild-type
S. cerevisiae (18.5 ±
4 nmol GlcNAc/h/mg protein), probably due to a higher level
of protein expression. No Chs activity could be detected in
the supernatant after high-speed centrifugation, so crude extracts
(1,500
x g, supernatant) were used for subsequent experiments
(pH optimum, divalent cation preference, digitonin treatment,
and
Km measurement). Table
1 shows a comparison of the enzymatic
properties of EhCHS-1 with the three Chs activities of
S. cerevisiae and the "soluble" and "particulate" activities of
E. invadens (
8,
9). EhCHS-1 was found to be most active at a slightly basic
pH (7.5 to 8.0) in the presence of Mg
2+. EhCHS-1 activity did
not increase when membranes were pretreated with trypsin but
did increase when 0.1% digitonin was included in the assay mixture.
The apparent
Km of EhCHS-1 was 2 mM for UDP-GlcNAc. The pH optimum
of EhCHS-1 was more similar to that of the "particulate" form
of
E. invadens Chs than that of the "soluble" form. However,
EhCHS-1 differed from both reported
E. invadens Chs activities
in certain other characteristics, such as divalent cation preference
and apparent
Km. In the future, we hope to clone and express
full-length
E. invadens chitin synthase genes (for which only
partial sequences are known) in our yeast heterologous expression
system to allow for better comparisons between Chs activity
measured in yeast and endogenous Chs activity.
View this table:
[in this window]
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TABLE 1. Comparison of the enzymatic properties of Entamoeba histolytica CHS-1 with the three chitin synthase activities of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Chs1p to Chs3p)a and the "soluble" and "particulate" activities of E. invadensb
|
Significance.
While EhCHS-2 resembles chitin synthases of insects and nematodes,
EhCHS-1 is distinct from all previously described chitin synthases.
To our knowledge, this is the first example of heterologous
expression of a nonfungal Chs in budding yeast, and we and others
have numerous unreported failures to express Chs of even closely
related fungi in
S. cerevisiae. Because EhCHS-1 is functionally
independent of
S. cerevisiae accessory proteins, the
Entamoeba Chs appears to move by a bulk flow transport system to the plasma
membrane, where, by itself, EhCHS-1 synthesizes and extrudes
chitin polymer to the cell wall. Presently, we are creating
chimeras of EhCHS-1 and
S. cerevisiae Chs3p in order to determine
those parts of yeast Chs that interact with the accessory proteins.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health
grants AI44070 (to J.C.S.) and GM31318 (to P.W.R.) as well as
NSF grant IBN-0316963 (to C.A.S.).
We are grateful to Barbara Osmond of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge, MA) for providing the S. cerevisiae chs1/chs3 double mutant.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Boston University Goldman School of Dental Medicine, 715 Albany St., Evans 426, Boston, MA 02118. Phone: (617) 414-1054. Fax: (617) 414-1041. E-mail:
jsamuels{at}bu.edu.

K.L.V.D. and D.A.B. contributed equally to this work. 

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Eukaryotic Cell, January 2006, p. 203-206, Vol. 5, No. 1
1535-9778/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.5.1.203-206.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.