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Microsporidia dressing up: the spore polaroplast transport through the polar tube and transformation into the sporoplasm membrane

Authors :
Qing Lv
Liuyi Hong
Lei Qi
Yuqing Chen
Zhengkai Xie
Hongjie Liao
Chunfeng Li
Tian Li
Xianzhi Meng
Jie Chen
Jialing Bao
Junhong Wei
Bing Han
Qingtao Shen
Louis M. Weiss
Zeyang Zhou
Mengxian Long
Guoqing Pan
Source :
mBio, Vol 15, Iss 2 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2024.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Microsporidia are obligate intracellular parasites that infect a wide variety of hosts including humans. Microsporidian spores possess a unique, highly specialized invasion apparatus involving the polar filament, polaroplast, and posterior vacuole. During spore germination, the polar filament is discharged out of the spore forming a hollow polar tube that transports the sporoplasm components including the nucleus into the host cell. Due to the complicated topological changes occurring in this process, the details of sporoplasm formation are not clear. Our data suggest that the limiting membrane of the nascent sporoplasm is formed by the polaroplast after microsporidian germination. Using electron microscopy and 1,1′-dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′ tetramethyl indocarbocyanine perchlorate staining, we describe that a large number of vesicles, nucleus, and other cytoplasm contents were transported out via the polar tube during spore germination, while the posterior vacuole and plasma membrane finally remained in the empty spore coat. Two Nosema bombycis sporoplasm surface proteins (NbTMP1 and NoboABCG1.1) were also found to localize in the region of the polaroplast and posterior vacuole in mature spores and in the discharged polar tube, which suggested that the polaroplast during transport through the polar tube became the limiting membrane of the sporoplasm. The analysis results of Golgi-tracker green and Golgi marker protein syntaxin 6 were also consistent with the model of the transported polaroplast derived from Golgi transformed into the nascent sporoplasm membrane.IMPORTANCEMicrosporidia, which are obligate intracellular pathogenic organisms, cause huge economic losses in agriculture and even threaten human health. The key to successful infection by the microsporidia is their unique invasion apparatus which includes the polar filament, polaroplast, and posterior vacuole. When the mature spore is activated to geminate, the polar filament uncoils and undergoes a rapid transition into the hollow polar tube that transports the sporoplasm components including the microsporidian nucleus into host cells. Details of the structural difference between the polar filament and polar tube, the process of cargo transport in extruded polar tube, and the formation of the sporoplasm membrane are still poorly understood. Herein, we verify that the polar filament evaginates to form the polar tube, which serves as a conduit for transporting the nucleus and other sporoplasm components. Furthermore, our results indicate that the transported polaroplast transforms into the sporoplasm membrane during spore germination. Our study provides new insights into the cargo transportation process of the polar tube and origin of the sporoplasm membrane, which provide important clarification of the microsporidian infection mechanism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21507511
Volume :
15
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
mBio
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0f27877925b442b6a6c98762b04779f9
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02749-23