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Item Biochemical and pharmacological characterization of the Atg8 conjugation system in toxoplasma gondii(2017-06-28) Varberg, Joseph M.; Arrizabalaga, Gustavo; Sullivan, William J., Jr.; Mosley, Amber; Safa, Ahmad; Vasko, Michael R.Toxoplasma gondii is an important human pathogen that infects millions of people worldwide and causing severe and potentially lethal disease in immunocompromised individuals. Recently, a homologue for the autophagy protein Atg8 (TgAtg8) was identified in Toxoplasma that is required for both canonical and noncanonical processes essential for parasite viability. Importantly, TgAtg8 functionality requires its conjugation to phosphatidylethanolamine through the activity of the Atg8 conjugation system. In this thesis, we characterized the proteins that interact with TgAtg8 and TgAtg3, a component of the Atg8 conjugation system, to further define their functions in Toxoplasma and identify opportunities for targeted inhibition of Atg8-related processes. We previously identified that TgAtg8 is acetylated at lysine 23 (K23) and assessed the role of this modification in this thesis. Using mutagenesis, we showed that K23 acetylation did not modulate the interaction with TgAtg3, but appeared to promote TgAtg8 protein stability. Additionally, endogenous mutation of K23 to the nonacetylatable amino acid arginine resulted in severe impairment of parasite replication and spontaneous differentiation into bradyzoites. To gain insight into the role of TgAtg8 in Toxoplasma biology, we next characterized TgAtg8 and TgAtg3 interacting proteins using affinity purification and mass spectrometry. We identified a novel group of interacting proteins that are unique to Toxoplasma, including the dynamin-related protein DrpC. Functional characterization of DrpC identified a potential role of TgAtg8 in trafficking of membrane from the Golgi to the nascent daughter parasites during replication. Lastly, we examined a group of small molecules recently identified as Atg3-Atg8 inhibitors in Plasmodium falciparum and assessed their activity against Toxoplasma. Although the compounds effectively inhibited Toxoplasma replication, they did so through novel mechanisms of action unrelated to the disruption of the TgAtg3-Atg8 interaction. Together, this work provides insight into the function of the Atg8 conjugation system in Toxoplasma that will help guide the future development of novel therapeutics targeting Atg8-related processes.Item Functions of the Unique N-terminus of a GCN5 Histone Acetylase in Toxoplasma gondii(2007-05-18T13:14:16Z) Bhatti, Micah M.; Sullivan, William J., Jr.; Chan, Edward M.; Queener, Sherry F.; Safa, Ahmad R.; Sinai, Anthony P.; Vasko, Michael, R.GCN5 is a histone acetyltransferase (HAT) that remodels chromatin by acetylating lysine residues of histones. The GCN5 HAT identified in Toxoplasma gondii (TgGCN5) contains a unique N-terminal “extension” that bears no similarity to known proteins and is devoid of known protein motifs. The hypothesis of this thesis is the N-terminal extension is critical to the function of TgGCN5. Three possible roles of the N-terminus were investigated: nuclear localization, protein-protein interactions, and substrate recognition. Subcellular localization was determined via immunocytochemistry using parasites expressing recombinant forms of TgGCN5 fused to a FLAG tag. Initial studies performed with parasites expressing full length FLAG-TgGCN5 were positive for nuclear localization. Without the N-terminal extension (FLAG-ΔNT-TgGCN5) the protein remains cytoplasmic. Additional studies mapped a six amino acid motif (RKRVKR) as the nuclear localization signal (NLS). When RKRVKR is fused to a cytoplasmic protein, it gains access to the nucleus. Furthermore, we have established the NLS interacts with Toxoplasma importin α, a protein involved in nuclear trafficking. Interaction with importin α provides evidence that the TgGCN5 N-terminal extension is involved in mediating protein-protein interactions. In order to identify additional interacting proteins, FLAG affinity purification was performed on parasites expressing full length FLAG-TgGCN5 and FLAG-ΔNT-TgGCN5. Upon comparing the results of the two purifications, proteins captured with only full length TgGCN5 may be interacting with the N-terminal extension. Full length TgGCN5 affinity purification indicates an interaction with histone proteins, two different homologues of Ada2 (adapter protein reported to interact with GCN5 homologues), and several heat shock proteins. With regard to substrate recognition, the N-terminal extension of TgGCN5 is dispensable for the acetylation of non-nucleosomal histones in vitro. However, the lysine acetylated by TgGCN5 is surprisingly unique. Other GCN5 homologues preferentially acetylate lysine 14 in histone H3, but TgGCN5 exclusively acetylates lysine 18 in histone H3 and has no activity on lysine 14. Taken together, these results argue that the N-terminal extension of TgGCN5 is critical for mediating protein-protein interactions, including those responsible for trafficking the HAT to the parasite nucleus but does not appear to be required for the acetylation of non-nucleosomal histones.