4.7 Article

An Unusual U2AF2 Inhibits Splicing and Attenuates the Virulence of the Human Protozoan Parasite Entamoeba histolytica

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Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.888428

Keywords

intron retention; KH-QUA2 motifs; splicing complex E to A transition; protein-RNA binding; protein-protein interactions

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E. histolytica is a pathogen causing intestinal amebiasis and liver abscesses, and metronidazole is the main treatment drug. However, metronidazole-resistant strains have been reported recently, posing challenges for amebiasis eradication. RNA metabolism-related genes were found to be associated with the virulence of the parasite, and the 84KQ domain plays a critical role in splicing inhibition and intron retention. Surprisingly, the deletion of the 84KQ domain increased splicing and enhanced the virulence of the parasite.
E. histolytica is the etiological agent of intestinal amebiasis and liver abscesses, which still poses public health threat globally. Metronidazole is the drug of choice against amebiasis. However, metronidazole-resistant amoebic clinical isolates and strains have been reported recently, challenging the efforts for amebiasis eradication. In search of alternative treatments, E. histolytica transcriptomes have shown the association of genes involved in RNA metabolism with the virulence of the parasite. Among the upregulated genes in amoebic liver abscesses are the splicing factors EhU2AF2 and a paralog of EhSF3B1. For this reason and because EhU2AF2 contains unusual KH-QUA2 (84KQ) motifs in its lengthened C-terminus domain, here we investigated how the role of EhU2AF2 in pre-mRNA processing impacts the virulence of the parasite. We found that 84KQ is involved in splicing inhibition/intron retention of several virulence and non-virulence-related genes. The 84KQ domain interacts with the same domain of the constitutive splicing factor SF1 (SF1KQ), both in solution and when SF1KQ is bound to branchpoint signal RNA probes. The 84KQ-SF1KQ interaction prevents splicing complex E to A transition, thus inhibiting splicing. Surprisingly, the deletion of the 84KQ domain in EhU2AF2 amoeba transformants increased splicing and enhanced the in vitro and in vivo virulence phenotypes. We conclude that the interaction of the 84KQ and SF1KQ domains, probably involving additional factors, tunes down Entamoeba virulence by favoring intron retention.

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