The vacuolar-type proton-translocating pyrophosphatase (V-H+-PPase) is an enzyme previously described in detail only in plants. This paper demonstrates its presence in the trypanosomatid Trypanosoma cruzi. Pyrophosphate promoted organellar acidification in permeabilized amastigotes, epimastigotes, and trypomastigotes of T. cruzi. This activity was stimulated by K+ ions and was inhibited by Na+ ions and pyrophosphate analogs, as is the plant activity. Separation of epimastigote extracts on Percoll gradients yielded a dense fraction that contained H+-PPase activity measured both by proton uptake and phosphate release but lacked markers for mitochondria, lysosomes, glycosomes, cytosol, and plasma membrane. Antiserum raised against specific sequences of the plant V-H+-PPase cross-reacted with a T. cruzi protein, which was also detectable in the dense Percoll fraction. The organelles in this fraction appeared by electron microscopy to consist mainly of acidocalcisomes (acidic calcium storage organelles). This identification was confirmed by x-ray microanalysis. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy indicated that the V-H+-PPase was located in the plasma membrane and acidocalcisomes of the three different forms of the parasite. Pyrophosphate was able to drive calcium uptake in permeabilized T. cruzi. This uptake depended upon a proton gradient and was reversed by a specific V- H+-PPase inhibitor. Our results imply that the phylogenetic distribution of V-H+-PPases is much wider than previously perceived but that the enzyme has a unique subcellular location in trypanosomes.
CITATION STYLE
Scott, D. A., De Souza, W., Benchimol, M., Zhong, L., Lu, H. G., Moreno, S. N. J., & Docampo, R. (1998). Presence of a plant-like proton-pumping pyrophosphatase in acidocalcisomes of Trypanosoma cruzi. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(34), 22151–22158. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.34.22151
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