Abstract
The acquisition of genes by horizontal transfer can impart entirely new biological functions and provide an important route to major evolutionary innovation. Here we have used ancient gene reconstruction and functional assays to investigate the impact of a single horizontally transferred nucleotide transporter into the common ancestor of the Microsporidia, a major radiation of intracellular parasites of animals and humans. We show that this transporter provided early microsporidians with the ability to steal host ATP and to become energy parasites. Gene duplication enabled the diversification of nucleotide transporter function to transport new substrates, including GTP and NAD+, and to evolve the proton-energized net import of nucleotides for nucleic acid biosynthesis, growth and replication. These innovations have allowed the loss of pathways for mitochondrial and cytosolic energy generation and nucleotide biosynthesis that are otherwise essential for free-living eukaryotes, resulting in the highly unusual and reduced cells and genomes of contemporary Microsporidia.
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Introduction
Microsporidia are obligate intracellular parasites related to fungi that infect both immuno-competent and immuno-compromised humans1 and commercially important animals including fish, silkworms and honeybees2. Microsporidia can only complete their life cycle inside a host cell and survive in the external environment as resistant thick-walled spores3. The intracellular parasites grow rapidly and undergo several rounds of division before differentiating into new spores that are released into the environment to repeat the infection cycle. All microsporidian genomes have a highly reduced coding content comprising approximately 2000 to 3000 protein-coding genes and all species have lost the mitochondrial pathways for making ATP4,5,6, retaining a minimal genome-lacking mitochondrion7 (called a mitosome) only for its essential role in Fe/S protein biogenesis8,9. Although some species have retained genes for glycolysis, published data suggest that this pathway functions mainly in spores and is not used for making ATP in actively replicating parasites6,10. Other species, including the major human pathogen Enterocytozoon bieneusi have lost glycolysis altogether and thus have no independent means of making their own ATP5,11. This raises the question of how intracellular parasites acquire the enormous amounts of ATP and other nucleotides that they need to support their rapid growth and replication. It has been estimated that it takes at least 109 ATP molecules just to make one E. coli cell12 and ATP demand by the larger and more complex cells of Microsporidia is likely to be much higher. The loss of indigenous pathways for energy generation means that intracellular parasites must now obtain all of this ATP from the infected host cell.
Genome analyses suggest that reduction in metabolic capabilities is the predominant mode of microsporidian genome evolution4,5,6,9 and that this has been supported by expansion of transporter gene families to compensate for pathway loss13. Given their predicted essential roles in supporting parasite growth and replication, surprisingly few of these transport proteins have been functionally characterised. Exceptions include the nucleotide transport (NTT) proteins that are expressed in the plasma membrane of Encephalitozoon cuniculi and Trachipleistophora hominis and which can transport ATP in heterologous transport assays using E. coli14,15. Phylogenetic analyses16,17,18 suggest that NTT transporters were acquired by horizontal gene transfer into the common ancestor of Microsporidia and Rozella allomycis, a fungal endoparasite17,19 belonging to the paraphyletic group Rozellomycota19 that also contains Mitosporidium daphniae20, and which is mainly known from environmental sequencing datasets19.
Horizontal gene transfers into eukaryotes have been suggested to be important drivers of adaptive evolution but experimental data supporting this hypothesis is limited21. To test the hypothesis that the horizontal acquisition of NTT transporters has played an important role in the adaptation of Microsporidia, we used phylogenetic methods and ancestral sequence reconstruction22 to infer the sequences of ancestral NTTs at two key points in their evolutionary history. Functional assays show that the reconstructed NTTs can transport ATP and hence would have provided early Microsporidia with the capacity to become intracellular energy parasites. To investigate how NTTs have evolved since their initial acquisition, we characterised the NTTs of three different contemporary Microsporidia species that can infect humans. The results show that NTT function has evolved to increase the range of purine nucleotides transported and to include a change in transport mechanism by individual NTTs to allow the net import of nucleotides for parasite growth and biosynthesis. The evolution of NTT function has enabled the loss of endogenous pathways for nucleotide biosynthesis and energy generation making Microsporidia dependent on NTT-mediated import for their survival. Our work demonstrates the fundamental importance of nucleotide transport proteins for a major group of medically and economically important obligate intracellular parasites infecting most animal groups.
Results
Ancestral sequence reconstruction of NTT transporters
The best fitting CAT+GTR model23 was used to infer a phylogeny for NTT sequences from Microsporidia, Rozella allomycis, and outgroup Bacteria. CAT+GTR is particularly appropriate for analysis of NTTs because it explicitly models the site-specific biochemical properties of the amino acid alignment, such as the preference for hydrophobic residues in transmembrane domains. Both the monophyly of all Microsporidia NTTs, and a sister-group relationship between Microsporidia and Rozella, were recovered with maximal posterior support (PP = 1) in the consensus tree (Figs. 1a and 2a). We used the ancestral program in the PhyloBayes package23 to sample the most probable amino acid at each site (see Supplementary Data 1 and 2) in the ancestral sequences corresponding to the common ancestors of Microsporidia (AncNTTMic) and Microsporidia and Rozella (AncNTTRoz/Mic) (Fig. 1a). Both inferred ancestral sequences contain residues known to be functionally important for NTTs (Supplementary Fig. 1 & 2)24 and HHPRED analyses demonstrate that, like contemporary NTTs, they are members of the Major Facilitator Superfamily (MFS; Supplementary Table 2). Analyses of the inferred secondary structure of the two ancestral protein sequences using HMMTOP25 suggested that they contain the necessary transmembrane domains in the correct orientation to fold and insert into membranes as a member of the MFS and NTT protein family (Fig. 1b; Supplementary Fig. 3a & 4). To test empirically whether the predicted ancestral proteins can insert into biological membranes and undertake the conformational changes that MFS transporters must adopt to transport substrates26, we used gene synthesis to recreate the ancestral proteins in the laboratory.
The ancestral sequences AncNTTRoz/Mic and AncNTTMic were synthesised as codon-optimised genes for expression in E. coli, a heterologous host that can be used for transport assays with radio-labelled [α32P]-ATP14,15. Consistent with their predicted secondary structure (Supplementary Fig. 3a), the expressed proteins were detected in the E. coli membrane fraction (Fig. 1c; Supplementary Fig. 4). Both proteins also transported [α32P]-ATP in a time-dependent manner (Fig. 1d) and at high affinity as demonstrated by the low apparent Km values (Fig. 1e; Supplementary Fig. 3b). Competition assays14,27 using a range of substrates to compete with [α32P]-ATP uptake indicated that the “ancestral” NTTs have relatively narrow substrate ranges, as only ATP and ADP consistently inhibited transport below 50% compared to the controls (Fig. 1f). Competition assays can only give an indication of whether a particular substrate might be transported because they do not actually measure transport of the cold substrate14,27, so we tested transport of radio-labelled UTP, dTTP, GTP and NAD+ by AncNTTRoz/Mic and AncNTTMic. Both of the ancestral NTTs exhibited strong uptake of radio-labelled ATP; at least a tenfold increase compared to the empty vector controls (Fig. 1g) and only weak uptake of the other tested nucleotides. Some members of the MFS transporter family, including some NTTs used by intracellular bacteria27, are symporters that can use proton gradients to drive net import26. The protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) can be used to dissipate the proton gradient27 to identify symporters experimentally. We therefore tested transport of radio-labelled ATP by both ancestral transporters in the presence or absence of CCCP, and included PamNTT5 of Protochlamydia amoebophila, an intracellular bacterial symbiont of Acanthamoeba, as a known symporter and positive control27. The addition of CCCP (Fig. 1h) did not inhibit transport indicating that AncNTTRoz/Mic and AncNTTMic are ATP/ADP exchangers, a result that was supported by a counter-exchange assay for AncNTTRoz/Mic (Fig. 1i). In these assays, [α32P]-ATP-loaded bacteria were exposed to buffer or buffer containing unlabelled external ATP, and the residual radiolabel associated with harvested bacteria followed over time. AncNTTRoz/Mic exhibited a higher rate of export of radionucleotide when incubated with ATP (Fig. 1i), as reported previously for the E. cuniculi exchanger EcNTT314. Together these data suggest that acquisition of an NTT gene by the common ancestor of Microsporidia and Rozella would have provided a tool to steal host ATP and thus to become an energy parasite.
Functional analysis of NTTs from contemporary Microsporidia
To investigate the role(s) that NTT transporters play in contemporary parasite biology, we characterised the NTTs of three phylogenetically distinct Microsporidia (Fig. 2) that can infect humans as well as animals. The presence of NTT genes in all microsporidian genomes and the expansion of NTT gene copy number by independent lineage- and clade-specific gene duplication events (Fig. 2), coupled with the central roles of nucleotides in cellular metabolism, suggest that NTT-mediated transport plays an important role in the biology of contemporary Microsporidia. In classical theory, gene duplication is thought to provide an important pathway to evolutionary innovation because it can free individual gene copies to evolve new functions28. Expansion of transporter functional repertoire must have occurred during Microsporidia evolution because, in addition to the absence of pathways for ATP production, the early ATP-expensive steps needed for the de novo biosynthesis of the nucleotides needed to make DNA, RNA and nicotinamide cofactors are also missing from sequenced genomes13,29. To test the hypothesis that NTT transporter function has evolved after duplication, and thus enabled pathway loss, we investigated the functional biology of NTTs from Encephalitozoon cuniculi and Trachipleistophora hominis which cause opportunistic infections of humans3 and are among the few model species that can be grown in co-culture with mammalian cells. The NTTs from Enterocytozoon bieneusi, the most common cause of human infection and which cannot yet be grown in the laboratory30 were also characterised as was the single NTT of Rozella allomycis, the endoparasitic fungal sister lineage to Microsporidia. Rozella has less reduced gene content than Microsporidia including components of a mitochondrial electron transport chain for making ATP, and a lifestyle that alternates between a free-living motile zoospore and a naked endoparasitic stage17.
The draft genome sequence5 of Enterocytozoon bieneusi was used to guide synthesis of its four NTTs (EbNTT1–4) as codon-optimised genes for expression in E. coli. The four NTT genes from E. cuniculi (EcNTT1–4)14 and from T. hominis (ThNTT1–4)15 as well as the single NTT gene (RaNTT1) from Rozella allomycis17 were all cloned and expressed in E. coli. All of the NTTs transported [α32P]-ATP (Fig. 2b) in a time-dependent manner (Fig. 2c)14,15. To calculate an apparent Km and Vmax for the T. hominis, E. bieneusi, and R. allomycis NTTs, [α32P]-ATP uptake was performed in the presence of increasing concentrations of non-radio-labelled ATP (Fig. 2d). The low Km values for all of these transporters are similar to published values for E. cuniculi NTTs14 (Fig. 2d; Supplementary Fig. 3b) and suggest that they have high affinity for ATP. Moreover, the Km values for the Microsporidia and Rozella NTTs are well below the estimated ATP concentration for the cytoplasm of eukaryotes (~3 mM)31, suggesting that transport of ATP from infected host cells would not be limiting during the parasite life cycle.
Analysis of the E. bieneusi, E. cuniculi, T. hominis, and Rozella allomycis genomes demonstrate that they lack genes for the enzymes needed to make purine and pyrimidine nucleotides de novo (Supplementary Fig. 5 and 6)29. To investigate if the Microsporidia NTTs can transport other nucleotides to fill these gaps, we carried out competition assays for NTT-mediated 32P-ATP uptake in the presence of an excess of a variety of individual cold purine and pyrimidine nucleotides, nucleosides, and nicotinamide derivatives. The results of the competition experiments and published data for E. cuniculi14, suggest that the NTTs of all three Microsporidia are purine nucleotide transporters with a preference for adenosine and guanosine triphosphates and diphosphates (Fig. 3a). By contrast, transport by R. allomycis RaNTT1 was strongly reduced only by cold ATP and ADP (Fig. 3a). The addition of cold ITP-reduced and IDP-reduced ATP transport below 50% by some Microsporidia NTTs (Fig. 3a), but these are unlikely to be substrates for nucleotide biosynthesis since the genomes of all three species lack the enzymes29 for incorporating ITP or IDP into cellular metabolism (Supplementary Fig. 6). ATP transport by some T. hominis, E. cuniculi14 and E. bieneusi NTTs was also inhibited to varying degrees by nicotinamide derivatives (mainly NAD+, NADH and NADP+) suggesting that these might be transported (Fig. 3a), as demonstrated previously for one of the NTTs (PamNTT4) of Protochlamydia amoebophila32. NADH and NADPH are predicted to be essential co-factors in core metabolic reactions in Microsporidia13 but genome analyses suggest that unlike Rozella allomycis, the Microsporidia species E. cuniculi, T. hominis and E. bieneusi cannot make NAD+ derivatives de novo (Supplementary Fig. 7). Retention of the NAD+ kinase and phosphohydrolase enzymes needed to interconvert between NAD+ and NADP+ (Supplementary Fig. 7) does suggest, however, that if NAD+ can be transported, then all three species could make NADH, NADP+ and NADPH.
To test the hypotheses of substrate transport generated by the competition data, we investigated the transport of radio-labelled UTP, dTTP, GTP and NAD+ by the individual NTTs when expressed in E. coli. The results of these experiments demonstrate that GTP is transported at high levels for all of the Microsporidia NTTs (Fig. 3b). This suggests that the two main classes of purine nucleotides are transported by Microsporidia NTTs and this is consistent with genome analyses that suggest that both types would need to be imported13,29. By contrast, we found no evidence for GTP transport above background by the single NTT of R. allomycis (RaNTT1), and thus it appears that transport by RaNTT1 is restricted to ATP and ADP among the substrates tested (Figs. 2b and 3). Radio-labelled 32P-NAD+ uptake assays in E. coli revealed that all of the NTTs from T. hominis and E. bieneusi could transport NAD+ (Fig. 3b). The weak NAD+ transport detected for two (EcNTT2 and EcNTT3) of the four E. cuniculi NTTs (Fig. 3b) was only slightly higher than, and not significantly different (p > 0.05) to, the empty vector control. The observation that the R. allomycis RaNTT1 did not transport NAD+ (Fig. 3b) is consistent with genome analysis that suggests that, unlike Microsporidia, R. allomycis can make this important cofactor (Supplementary Fig. 7).
The competition data provided no evidence that ATP transport by Microsporidia NTTs was significantly inhibited by pyrimidine substrates (Fig. 3a), despite evidence from genome analysis (Supplementary Fig. 5) that Microsporidia lack the enzymes needed to make pyrimidines de novo. Genome analyses do suggest that, if UTP were to be transported, then Microsporidia have the enzymes to make the other pyrimidine nucleotides needed for nucleic acid biosynthesis (Supplementary Fig. 5)15,29. We therefore investigated if radio-labelled UTP or dTTP were transported in our assays, but detected no convincing evidence for transport of either substrate by the Microsporidia or Rozella NTTs (Fig. 3). It has previously been suggested33 that a conserved family of Microsporidia putative transporters related to the E. coli NupG nucleoside transporter13 might be used by the parasites to import host cell nucleosides, potentially providing starting substrates for pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis. However, in addition to the absence of any published experimental data to support nucleoside transport by these parasite proteins, the genome of E. cuniculi15 and other Microsporidia29 appear to lack the kinases needed to use nucleosides for pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis29. This suggests that nucleoside import would not solve the pyrimidine deficit for these species.
Our data suggest that NTT substrate range has evolved over time facilitated by gene duplication, allowing the loss of parasite pathways for ATP and nucleotide biosynthesis. However, the inferred ancestral NTT phenotype of nucleotide exchange cannot provide the net import of nucleotides needed for nucleic acid synthesis and the increase in parasite biomass observed during intracellular infection (Fig. 4a,b). We therefore tested transport of radio-labelled ATP by all of the NTTs in the presence or absence of CCCP27. The results suggest that whereas the Rozella NTT and most of the Microsporidia NTTs have retained the ancestral exchanger phenotype (Fig. 3c), T. hominis ThNTT4, and E. bieneusi EbNTT1 and EbNTT2 have independently evolved into symporters capable of carrying out net nucleotide import (Figs. 3c and 5a). To investigate further, we carried out counter-exchange assays14,27 for a representative sample of both types of NTT (Fig. 3d). ThNTT4 and PamNTT5 exhibited no increased rate of export of radio-labelled nucleotide consistent with them being symporters14,27, while EcNTT314, ThNTT2 and RaNTT1 exhibited a higher rate of export when incubated with ATP (Fig. 3d), suggesting that they are exchangers. Taken together, our data suggest that, in addition to using NTTs for energy parasitism, E. bieneusi and T. hominis, but not E. cuniculi, can use some of their NTTs for net import of NAD+ and purine nucleotides.
Accelerated evolution and functionality of paralogous NTTs
Data from yeast34 has demonstrated that evolution following gene duplication can also include accelerated rates of sequence evolution and changes in gene expression or protein localisation. The differences in branch lengths (Fig. 2) observed for individual Microsporidia NTT paralogues relative to the Rozella outgroup is suggestive of gene-specific accelerated evolution and altered selective constraints. Indeed, a Bayesian relative rates test indicated that the 95% credible intervals for all of the Microsporidia NTT branch lengths do not overlap with that of the Rozella lineage, providing evidence of significant increases and differences in evolutionary rates after the split between Microsporidia and Rozella (Fig. 2; Supplementary Table 3). To investigate if these accelerated evolutionary rates are associated with changes in Trachipleistophora hominis NTT RNA transcript levels or protein localisation, we used published15 NTT-specific antibodies against ThNTT1, 3 and 4, coupled with RNAseq to investigate protein and RNA transcript abundance in a synchronised culture of T. hominis infecting Rabbit kidney cells (Fig. 4a). Apart from a single early time point for ThNTT3 (Fig. 4a), ThNTT transporters are present in the plasma membrane15 of intracellular vegetative cells to meet the enormous demand for host ATP and GTP imposed by parasite growth and replication (Fig. 4a,b). The very high levels of transcripts for parasite ribosomal proteins (exemplified by ribosomal protein L37 in Fig. 4c) needed for ribosome biogenesis35, provide further evidence of the severe burden imposed by the parasites on host resources. Interestingly, no mitosomal location was detected for any T. hominis NTT throughout the parasite life cycle, in contrast to the situation in E. cuniculi where one NTT (EcNTT3) is targeted to its mitosomes14. The functional data obtained in the present study and our previous work14,15, suggest that T. hominis has adopted a different nucleotide acquisition strategy (Fig. 5b) to E. cuniculi during their independent evolution.
The T. hominis NTT paralogues with the longest branch lengths in the tree are ThNTT1 and 3 (Fig. 2a), and these two genes also have the lowest abundance of RNA transcripts throughout the parasite life cycle (Fig. 4c). Intriguingly, antibody data suggest that ThNTT1 and 3 have undergone functional specialisation because they are the only two NTTs that associate with the sporophorous vesicle that surrounds maturing T. hominis spores (Fig. 4a). RNA transcript levels for ThNTT2 and ThNTT3 (but not ThNTT1) rise during spore formation and follow the increases observed for transcripts of polar tube protein 2 and PGK that are enriched in spores6. This suggests that ThNTT2 and 3 may have a particular role in supplying ATP for the parasites during spore formation. Transcript abundance for the symporter ThNTT4 is in the top 10% of expressed genes throughout the parasite life cycle and is between 100-fold and 1000-fold higher than any other ThNTT (Fig. 4c). In the case of ThNTT4 (see Fig. 5b), the functional shift from ancestral exchanger to symporter has been coupled with increased gene expression, providing critical complementary adaptations that can support rapid parasite growth.
Discussion
Ancestral sequence recreation (ASR) brings with it a number of uncertainties associated with the reliability of ancient phylogenetic reconstructions22, but it nevertheless represents a powerful tool to test hypotheses about the function of genes in the deep past. Here, we provide experimental evidence that the inferred ancestral NTT sequences at two early and critical points in Microsporidia evolution (Fig. 1a), encode proteins that can insert into biological membranes and undergo the necessary conformational changes26 required to transport ATP and ADP. Moreover, the transport kinetics (apparent Km and Vmax) of the ancestral proteins fall within the variation reported for contemporary NTTs14,15,27. Our results suggest that the acquisition of an NTT gene by the common ancestor of Microsporidia and Rozella, an organism that evolved after the Rozella lineage split from other fungi around 900 million years ago36, would have allowed the adoption of energy parasitism. We also show that NTT copy number and function (Fig. 5a) has evolved across the Microsporidia tree during the ensuing millennia, allowing Microsporidia to further adapt to their intracellular lifestyle and to lose endogenous pathways for nucleotide biosynthesis and energy generation. These losses mean that contemporary Microsporidia can only survive in the external environment as highly resistant spores3. Their success as intracellular parasites is attested by the very large number (>1000) of Microsporidia species described to date and their apparent ubiquity as parasites among animal groups3. The latter suggests that the enormous diversity of Microsporidia is linked to the explosive radiation of their animal hosts over the past 600 to 700 million years37. Genome analyses suggest that expansion of different transporter families through gene duplication is a general feature of the otherwise highly reduced Microsporidia proteome13, providing the tools to harvest the sugars, lipids, amino acids and other building blocks, that they no longer make for themselves. The huge metabolic drain on host resources imposed by the transporters of rapidly growing and replicating parasites is likely a major reason for the reduced host fitness and increased mortality observed in susceptible eukaryotic populations1,2.
Methods
Host cell culture and parasite propagation
The Microsporidia Trachipleistophora hominis (ATCC—PRA-404) was initially isolated from a human HIV/AIDS patient38,39 and is now routinely sub-cultured within the rabbit kidney cell line RK-13 (ATCC—CCL-37) at 33 °C in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM), containing 10% FCS, penicillin (100 µg/ml) and streptomycin (100 µg/ml). Spores used in time course experiments were harvested from infected RK-13 cells grown in 20 175 cm2 tissue culture flasks. Cells were washed and scraped into phosphate buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.4) and then lysed by sonication. The released spores were purified on a Percoll gradient prior to adding them to uninfected RK-13 cells as reported previously40.
Synchronising infection of RK-13 cells by T. hominis and RNASeq analysis
To synchronise the infection of T. hominis, healthy RK-13 cells grown in 150 cm2 round tissue culture dishes, were incubated with freshly prepared spores as previously described40 and then subjected to extensive washing after 2 h. Two dishes of cells were used for RNA purification40 at 3, 14, 22, 40, 70 and 96 h post-inoculation. Sequencing, including library preparation, was carried out using the Illumina stranded mRNA sample preparation kit, with sequencing carried out on two lanes of an Illumina HISeq 2500, producing a total of 27.5 M paired-end reads representing T. hominis transcripts. Sequencing reads were trimmed using CutAdapt to remove adaptor sequences and low quality 3′ sequence regions (set at the q -20 threshold). Trimmed reads were mapped to the T. hominis genome using TopHat241 and transcripts were assembled and quantified using Cufflinks and CuffDiff as previously described40.
Immunofluorescence microscopy of NTT transporters
Samples of infected RK-13 cells used in the RNASeq analysis were grown in parallel on 13 mm coverslips for immunofluorescence. At selected times post-infection, cells were washed twice in PBS prior to being fixed at −20C for 1–2 h with methanol/acetone (50:50). Fixed cells were washed in PBS, blocked in 1% milk in PBS and then labelled using published15 rabbit antisera (1:100) against T. hominis NTT transporters ThNTT1–4 or rat antisera (1:100) to T. hominis mitosomal Hsp70 (ThHSP70) which labels parasite-specific mitosomes, as previously described15. Cells were also stained with DAPI (Molecular Probes) and mounted in Vectashield Hard Set (VectorLabs). Microscopy was performed with a Zeiss AxioImager II epifluorescence microscope using a ×63 objective lens and images were processed using Axiovision software.
Cloning and gene synthesis of nucleotide transporters
Primers for the amplification of NTT transporter genes are given in Supplementary Table 1. Enterocytozoon bieneusi genomic DNA was obtained from purified spores (kindly provided by Dr. Elizabeth Didier, Tulane University, USA) and NTT genes for sequence checking were PCR amplified and named EbNTT1–4. The synthetic NTT genes used for transport assays were codon-optimised for expression in E. coli and synthesised by GeneArt. The single NTT gene from Rozella allomycis17 was PCR-amplified from R. allomycis genomic DNA (kindly provided by Dr. Timothy James, University of Michigan, USA) and named RaNTT1. All transporter genes were cloned into pET16b (Novagen) in frame with an N-terminal deca-histidine tag and confirmed by sequencing. pET16b plasmids encoding T. hominis or E. cuniculi NTT transporters were prepared previously14,15.
NTT expression, western blotting and bacterial fractionation
For all NTTs, expression was performed from a pET16b vector freshly transformed into E. coli Rosetta2 DE3 pLysS (EMDMillipore). Luria Broth was inoculated with individual colonies and shaken overnight at 37 °C prior to the inoculation of Terrific Broth (TB; Sigma). At OD600 0.4–0.6, cells were chilled to 18 °C prior to the addition of 1 mM IPTG to induce gene expression for 16–18 h. Bacteria were chilled on ice, sedimented at 6000 × g for 5 min and washed twice with cold PBS. Standard western blot analysis was performed on 20 μg total bacteria lysate using an anti-polyHis antibody (H1029, Sigma) and the colonies expressing the highest levels of NTTs were used for subsequent studies. To assess membrane localisation, bacteria were sonicated followed by differential ultra-centrifugation to isolate a high-speed membrane fraction (20,000 × g × 10 min and 150,000 × g × 2 h) for western blot analysis.
Nucleotide uptake assays
Prior to uptake experiments, freshly transformed colonies were screened for NTT expression by western blot (2–3 days prior) and colonies with the highest NTT expression levels used in subsequent experiments. For all uptake assays, bacteria were resuspended to an OD600 of 5.0 in PBS. Uptake assays, including competition assays, counter-exchange and dose response experiments were performed as previously described14 with minor modifications. Single endpoint experiments were performed for 30 min for all radio-labelled nucleotides. An empty pET16b vector was used as a control in all experiments. To determine the initial rate of transport, [32P]-ATP uptake activity was recorded in the presence of increasing concentrations of non-radio-labelled substrates as described previously14. Data was fitted with the Michaelis–Menten equation to determine the apparent Km and Vmax of transport. Back-exchange assays were carried out as described previously14, whereby E. coli cells were loaded for 30 min with [32P]-ATP, washed and incubated in PBS containing 100 μM cold ATP and the residual radioactivity was detected by filtering the bacteria through a 0.45 μm cellulose nitrate membrane filter at different times post-washing. Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (5 min; 250 μM CCCP; Sigma Aldrich) was used to dissipate the proton gradient prior to uptake assays. All radiochemicals were obtained from Hartmann except [32P]-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), which was obtained from Perkin Elmer. Unlabelled nucleotides that were used in competition and uptake assays were obtained from Sigma Aldrich and prepared according to the manufacturer’s instructions. All uptake experiments were performed as independent triplicates and where indicated, significant difference was assessed using a one-way ANOVA performed using the statistical program SPSS.
Phylogenetic analysis and inference of ancestral NTT sequences
We augmented the sequence sampling of a published NTT phylogeny15 with the NTT protein sequences from recently sequenced Microsporidia genomes using BLASTP searches at NCBI, using T. hominis ThNTT4 as the query. Sequences were aligned using MUSCLE42 and the alignment was manually edited to remove insertions found in single sequences and the very C-terminal end of the alignment, where there was no recognisable homology between the bacterial and eukaryotic sequences. The alignment can be downloaded from Figshare (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5170729.v1) and is also included as a high-resolution pdf for on-screen visualisation (Supplementary Fig. 2). We tested the fit of the single-matrix LG model43, and the site-heterogeneous CAT+Poisson and CAT+GTR44 models to the alignment using PhyloBayes 3.323, in all cases using a discretised gamma distribution (four categories) to model among-site rate variation. Posterior predictive simulations indicated that only the CAT+GTR model provided an adequate fit to the alignment with respect to site-specific sequence composition, which is known to be an important factor in accurate phylogenetic inference45. We therefore used the CAT+GTR model both to infer the tree and to reconstruct ancestral sequences, using the ancestral program that is part of the PhyloBayes package. Figure 2 depicts the posterior consensus tree inferred under the CAT+GTR model, in which all relationships with posterior support <0.5 were collapsed. Branch lengths are proportional to the expected number of substitutions per site. We obtained point estimates of the ancestral NTT protein sequences in the Microsporidia common ancestor and in the common ancestor of Microsporidia and Rozella by selecting the amino acid with the highest posterior probability at each site in the alignment (Supplementary Data 1 and 2). Analyses of the secondary structure of the two inferred sequences was performed with HMMTOP25. Graphical representations of transmembrane topology were performed with TMRPres2D (http://bioinformatics.biol.uoa.gr/TMRPres2D). The inferred ancestral sequences have been submitted to Genbank (AncNTTRoz/Mic: MF279273; AncNTTMic: MF279274).
To test whether the differences in branch lengths among paralogous Microsporidia NTTs observed in the Bayesian consensus tree were significant, we used a Bayesian relative rates test. We constructed 95% credible intervals for the patristic distances (that is, the summed branch length differences) from the common ancestor of Microsporidia and Rozella to the tips represented by each NTT that was functionally characterised in this study. These distances were computed on each tree sampled during the MCMC run, after discarding the first 50% of points as burn-in, and are summarised in Supplementary Table 3. The means and credible intervals for Microsporidia NTTs are clearly distinct from each other and from the shorter branch leading to Rozella, providing evidence for changes in evolutionary rate following gene duplication during the radiation of Microsporidia.
Identification of nucleotide metabolic genes in Microsporidia
Microsporidia homologues were identified as described in refs. 13,15,29. In brief, Microsporidia protein families were constructed using Markov Clustering with all-against-all sequence similarity scores generated from PHMMER. Putative functions of Microsporidia proteins were inferred using COG annotation of the human or yeast homologue represented in the same cluster. As Microsporidia sequences are often highly divergent, HHsearch46 was also used to annotate Microsporidia clusters for which no COG hit was obtained. Homologues from Rozella allomycis were identified using analysis results from KAAS in addition to KEGG annotation available from the JGI Genome portal (http://genome.jgi.doe.gov). KASS was set to search against the default eukaryote representative sets with the addition of Nosema ceranae, Neurospora crassa, Aspergillus oryzae, Sclerotina sclerotiorum, Phaeosphaeria nodorum, Tuber melanosporum and Cryptococcus neoformans. The bi-directional best-hit method was used to assign homologues. To further identify potential homologues from Microsporidia and Rozella, manual curation using domain identification and Psi-blast and tblastn searches were also performed (https://blast.ncbi.nim.nih.gov/Blast.cgi).
Data availability
Sequence data that support the findings of this study have been deposited in Genbank with the primary accession codes MF279273 and MF279274, and in Figshare.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Maxine Geggie for assistance with tissue culture. Dr. Elizabeth Didier for E. bieneusi spores and Dr. Timothy James for Rozella allomycis genomic DNA. Drs. Trevor Booth and Alex Laude provided assistance with microscopy. T.A.W. is supported by a Royal Society University Research Fellowship. E.R.S.K. and T.M.E. acknowledge support from a Wellcome Trust Programme Grant (089803/Z/09/Z). T.M.E. acknowledges support from the European Research Council Advanced Investigator Programme (ERC 2010-268701).
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P.D., T.A.W., K.M.S., A.K.W., R.P.H., E.R.S.K. and T.M.E. conceived and designed experiments. P.D., K.M.S., A.K.W., A.V.G., E.K. and P.M. performed the experiments. P.D., S.N., K.M.S., A.K.W. and T.A.W. analysed the data. P.D., K.M.S., T.A.W., R.P.H. and T.M.E. wrote the paper in consultation with all authors.
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Dean, P., Sendra, K.M., Williams, T.A. et al. Transporter gene acquisition and innovation in the evolution of Microsporidia intracellular parasites. Nat Commun 9, 1709 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03923-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03923-4
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