Michele Klingbeil

Professor

Photo of Michele Klingbeil
Phone: 

413-577-3823

Fax: 

413-545-1578

Office: 

N269 Life Science Lab

Ph.D.: 

Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Toledo, 1996

Mailing address: 

Michele M. Klingbeil, Ph.D.
Department of Microbiology
418 Morrill Science Center IVN
University of Massachusetts
639 North Pleasant Street
Amherst, MA 01003-9298
 

Research Interests

Trypanosomatid parasites (Trypanosoma and Leishmania species) cause deadly diseases in humans and livestock. Current treatments are often toxic and difficult to administer in endemic regions (mainly Third World countries). The need for new anti-trypanosomatid drugs has never been greater. As one of the earliest branching eukaryotic lineages, trypanosomes display a number of unusual biological properties. One property without counterpart in nature is their amazing mitochondrial DNA known as kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). The kDNA is a network containing thousands of catenated DNA molecules (minicircles and maxicircles, figure at left). We are interested in studying proteins involved in replicating this novel structure. Our primary focus is on a family of 4 DNA polymerases (Pol) from Trypanosoma brucei (Klingbeil et al., Mol. Cell 10, p. 175-186, figure at right) that are related to bacterial Pol I, all of which localize to the mitochondrion.This Pol I-like family is present in all the major trypanosomatid parasites, but not in mammals.

How is the kDNA network replicated?

Key to the mechanism of network replication is the release of minicircles from the kDNA network into the specialized kinetoflagellar zone to replicate as free circular molecules, and their subsequent reattachment at the network periphery. Several proteins localize to specific regions surrounding the condensed kDNA disk including 2 of the Pol I-like proteins (figure at right). Genetic studies using RNA interference (RNAi) indicate that Pol IB and Pol IC are involved in minicircle replication and essential for parasite survival. The other 2 polymerases could be involved in kDNA repair. In mammals, Pol gamma is the only DNA polymerase involved in mitochondrial DNA replication. Trypanosomatid parasites lack Pol gamma, but the Pol I-like family represents another intriguing property of trypanosomes different from the mammalian host, that serve as an attractive new drug target with broad applications to potentially treat several trypanosomatid parasitic diseases.

Using a combination of reverse genetics (RNAi), cell biology and biochemistry, we would like to answer several questions. What specific roles do the Pol I-like proteins play in replication and repair? What enzymatic properties distinguish between replication and repair functions? What other interacting proteins are required for kDNA replication and repair? Most importantly, are there inhibitors specific to these Pol I-like proteins?

Selected Publications

Research interests - short: 

Parasitology, the replication and repair of mitochondrial DNA (kinetoplast DNA network) in African trypanosomes