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Leishmania type II dehydrogenase is essential for parasite viability irrespective of the presence of an active complex I.

Margarida DuarteCleide FerreiraGurleen Kaur KhandpurTamara FlohrJannik ZimmermannHelena CastroJohannes M HerrmannBruce MorganAna M Tomás
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Type II NADH dehydrogenases (NDH2) are monotopic enzymes present in the external or internal face of the mitochondrial inner membrane that contribute to NADH/NAD+ balance by conveying electrons from NADH to ubiquinone without coupled proton translocation. Herein, we characterize the product of a gene present in all species of the human protozoan parasite Leishmania as a bona fide, matrix-oriented, type II NADH dehydrogenase. Within mitochondria, this respiratory activity concurs with that of type I NADH dehydrogenase (complex I) in some Leishmania species but not others. To query the significance of NDH2 in parasite physiology, we attempted its genetic disruption in two parasite species, exhibiting a silent ( Leishmania infantum , Li) and a fully operational ( Leishmania major , Lm) complex I. Strikingly, this analysis revealed that NDH2 abrogation is not tolerated by Leishmania , not even by complex I-expressing Lm species. Conversely, complex I is dispensable in both species, provided that NDH2 is sufficiently expressed. That a type II dehydrogenase is essential even in the presence of an active complex I places Leishmania NADH metabolism into an entirely unique perspective and suggests unexplored functions for NDH2 that span beyond its complex I-overlapping activities. Notably, by showing that the essential character of NDH2 extends to the disease-causing stage of Leishmania , we genetically validate NDH2-an enzyme without a counterpart in mammals-as a candidate target for leishmanicidal drugs.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • endothelial cells
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • trypanosoma cruzi
  • life cycle