Trichomonas is an amitochondriate parasitic protozoon specialized for an anaerobic lifestyle. Nevertheless, it is exposed to oxygen and is able to cope with the resultant oxidative stress. In the absence of glutathione, cysteine has been thought to be the major antioxidant. We now report that the parasite contains thioredoxin reductase, which functions together with thioredoxin and thioredoxin peroxidase to detoxify potentially damaging oxidants. Thioredoxin reductase and thioredoxin also reduce cystine and so may play a role in maintaining the cellular cysteine levels. The importance of the thioredoxin system as one of the major antioxidant defense mechanisms in Trichomonas was confirmed by showing that the parasite responds to environmental changes resulting in increased oxidative stress by up-regulating thioredoxin and thioredoxin peroxidases levels. Sequence data indicate that the thioredoxin reductase of Trichomonas differs fundamentally in structure from that of its human host and thus may represent a useful drug target. The protein is generally similar to thioredoxin reductases present in other lower eukaryotes, all of which probably originated through horizontal gene transfer from a prokaryote. The phylogenetic signal in thioredoxin peroxidase is weak, but evidence from trees suggests that this gene has been subject to repeated horizontal gene transfers from different prokaryotes to different eukaryotes. The data are thus consistent with the complexity hypothesis that predicts that the evolution of simple pathways such as the thioredoxin cascade are likely to be affected by horizontal gene transfer between species.
The intracellular transport of iron and its incorporation into organelles are poorly understood processes in eukaryotes and virtually unknown in parasitic protists. The transport of iron is of particular interest in trichomonads, which possess hydrogenosomes instead of mitochondria. The metabolic functions of hydrogenosomes, which contain a specific set of FeS proteins, entirely depend on iron acquisition. In this work the incorporation of iron into the cattle parasite Tritrichomonas foetus was monitored. Iron was efficiently taken up from 59Fe-nitrilotriacetic acid and accumulated in the cytosol (88·9 %) and hydrogenosomes (4·7 % of the total radioactivity). Using atomic absorption spectrophotometry, an unusually high steady-state iron concentration in hydrogenosomes was determined [54·4±1·1 nmol Fe (mg protein)−1]. The concentration of iron in the cytosol was 13·4±0·5 nmol Fe (mg protein)−1. Qualitative analysis of incorporated iron was performed using native gradient PAGE. The majority of the 59Fe in the cytosol appeared as the labile-iron pool, which represents weakly bound iron associated with compounds of molecular mass ranging from 5000 to 30 000 Da. Ferritin was not observed in Tt. foetus, nor in two other anaerobic protists, Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia intestinalis. Analysis of Tt. foetus hydrogenosomes showed at least nine iron-binding compounds, which were absent in metronidazole-resistant mutants. The major iron-binding compound was identified as [2Fe–2S] ferredoxin of the adrenodoxin type.
The ability of a microbial invader to acquire iron from its vertebrate host has been recognized as an important virulence mechanism in some pathogenic bacteria. We examined the involvement of similar mechanisms in an experimental infection of mice by a protozoan pathogen of cattle, Tritrichomonas foetus. In a series of experiments, outbred ICR mice were inoculated intraperitoneally with two strains of T. foetus, the moderately virulent KV-1 (approximately 5% mortality rate) and the highly virulent LUB-1MIP (approximately 80% mortality rate). Treatment of mice with ferric ammonium citrate (FeAC) (100 mg/kg per day intraperitoneally) increased the mortality rate caused by the KV-1 infection up to the level determined for the highly virulent strain. The treatment effect was dose dependent and required early administration of FeAC after inoculation of parasites and its continued supply for at least 3 subsequent days. Daily sampling of peritoneal exudate showed that the infection-enhancing effect of iron overload was associated with a stimulation of parasite multiplication, which in the case of KV-1 infection was strongly suppressed in untreated mice. Consistent with these findings, the strain of lower virulence (KV-1) showed considerably lower efficiency accumulating radiolabeled iron from transferrin and a low-molecular source [Fe(III)nitrilotriacetic acid] in vitro. The results indicate an involvement of iron uptake mechanisms by the parasite as a virulence factor in T. foetus infection.
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