Oxidant activated soluble adenylate cyclase of Leishmania donovani regulates the cAMP–PKA signaling axis for its intra‐macrophage survival during infection

Adenosine 3',5'‐cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) is a stress sensor molecule that transduces the cellular signal when Leishmania donovani moves from insect vector to mammalian host. At this stage, the parasite membrane‐bound receptor adenylate cyclase predominantly produces cAMP to cope with th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cellular biochemistry 2021-10, Vol.122 (10), p.1413-1427
Hauptverfasser: Kumar, Manjay, Das, Sushmita, Sen, Abhik, Abhishek, Kumar, Shafi, Md.Taj, Bamra, Tanvir, Kumar, Ajay, Kumar, Vinod, Kumar, Ashish, Mukharjee, Rimi, Dikhit, Manas R., Pandey, Krishna, Das, Pradeep
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Adenosine 3',5'‐cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) is a stress sensor molecule that transduces the cellular signal when Leishmania donovani moves from insect vector to mammalian host. At this stage, the parasite membrane‐bound receptor adenylate cyclase predominantly produces cAMP to cope with the oxidative assault imposed by host macrophages. However, the role of soluble adenylate cyclase of L. donovani (LdHemAC) has not been investigated fully. In the present investigation, we monitored an alternative pool of cAMP, maintained by LdHemAC. The elevated cAMP effectively transmits signals by binding to Protein Kinase A (PKA) present in the cytosol and regulates antioxidant gene expression and phosphorylates several unknown PKA substrate proteins. Menadione‐catalyzed production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) mimics host oxidative condition in vitro in parasites where cAMP production and PKA activity were found increased by ~1.54 ± 0.35, and ~1.78 ± 0.47‐fold, respectively while expression of LdHemAC gene elevated by ~2.18 ± 0.17‐fold. The LdHemAC sense these oxidants and became activated to cyclize ATP to enhance the cAMP basal level that regulates antioxidant gene expression to rescue parasites from oxidative stress. In knockdown parasites (LdHemAC‐KD), the downregulated antioxidant genes expression, namely, Sod (2.30 ± 0.46), Pxn (2.73 ± 0.15), Tdr (2.7 ± 0.12), and Gss (1.57 ± 0.15) results in decreased parasite viability while in overexpressed parasites (LdHemAC‐OE), the expression was upregulated by ~5.7 ± 0.35, ~2.57 ± 0.56, ~4.7 ± 0.36, and ~2.4 ± 0.83, respectively, which possibly overcomes ROS accumulation and enhances viability. Furthermore, LdHemAC‐OE higher PKA activity regulates phosphorylation of substrate proteins (~56 kDs in membrane fraction and ~25 kDs in the soluble fraction). It reduced significantly when treated with inhibitors like DDA, Rp‐cAMP, and H‐89 and increased by ~2.1 ± 0.28‐fold, respectively under oxidative conditions. The LdHemAC‐KD was found less infective to RAW 264.7 macrophages and more prone to oxidative damage as compared to LdHemAC‐OE and control parasites. Together, this study demonstrates mechanistic links among LdHemAC, cAMP, and PKA in parasite survival and invasion under host oxidative condition. The cytosolic adenylate cyclase in Leishmania donovani protects it from host‐generated reactive oxidants. This enzyme is activated by ROS and generates cyclic AMP. The antioxidant gene expression is dependent on the cAMP intrac
ISSN:0730-2312
1097-4644
DOI:10.1002/jcb.30018