African trypanosomes: the genome and adaptations for immune evasion

2011 ◽  
Vol 51 ◽  
pp. 47-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gloria Rudenko

The African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei is a flagellated unicellular parasite transmitted by tsetse flies that causes African sleeping sickness in sub-Saharan Africa. Trypanosomes are highly adapted for life in the hostile environment of the mammalian bloodstream, and have various adaptations to their cell biology that facilitate immune evasion. These include a specialized morphology, with most nutrient uptake occurring in the privileged location of the flagellar pocket. In addition, trypanosomes show extremely high rates of recycling of a protective VSG (variant surface glycoprotein) coat, whereby host antibodies are stripped off of the VSG before it is re-used. VSG recycling therefore functions as a mechanism for cleaning the VSG coat, allowing trypanosomes to survive in low titres of anti-VSG antibodies. Lastly, T. brucei has developed an extremely sophisticated strategy of antigenic variation of its VSG coat allowing it to evade host antibodies. A single trypanosome has more than 1500 VSG genes, most of which are located in extensive silent arrays. Strikingly, most of these silent VSGs are pseudogenes, and we are still in the process of trying to understand how non-intact VSGs are recombined to produce genes encoding functional coats. Only one VSG is expressed at a time from one of approximately 15 telomeric VSG ES (expression site) transcription units. It is becoming increasingly clear that chromatin remodelling must play a critical role in ES control. Hopefully, a better understanding of these unique trypanosome adaptations will eventually allow us to disrupt their ability to multiply in the mammalian bloodstream.

2009 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 8-11
Author(s):  
Mark Carrington

African trypanosomes are excellent parasites and can maintain an infection of a large mammalian host for months or years. In endemic areas, Human African Trypanosomiasis, also called sleeping sickness, has been largely unaffected by the advent of modern medicine, and trypanosomiasis of domestic livestock is a major restraint on productivity in endemic areas and is arguably the major contributor to the institutionalized poverty in much of rural sub-Saharan Africa1,2. A simple way of visualizing the effect of the livestock disease is to compare maps showing the distribution of livestock (www.ilri.org/InfoServ/Webpub/Fulldocs/Mappoverty/index.htm) and tsetse flies, the insect vector (www.fao.org/ag/AGAinfo/programmes/en/paat/maps.html): the lack of overlap is remarkable. Tsetse flies are only present in sub-Saharan Africa, and this probably restricted the spread of African trypanosomiasis until historical times. Livestock infections are now present in much of South Asia and South America, a product of long distance trade and adaptation of the trypanosomes to mechanical transmission3. The majority of research is on Trypanosoma brucei as this includes the human infective subspecies. This article provides a description of progress in the understanding the molecular details of how the trypanosome interacts with the mammalian immune system and how these studies have extended beyond this to fundamental aspects of eukaryotic cell biology.


Author(s):  
Fabian Link ◽  
Alyssa R. Borges ◽  
Nicola G. Jones ◽  
Markus Engstler

Trypanosoma brucei is one of only a few unicellular pathogens that thrives extracellularly in the vertebrate host. Consequently, the cell surface plays a critical role in both immune recognition and immune evasion. The variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) coats the entire surface of the parasite and acts as a flexible shield to protect invariant proteins against immune recognition. Antigenic variation of the VSG coat is the major virulence mechanism of trypanosomes. In addition, incessant motility of the parasite contributes to its immune evasion, as the resulting fluid flow on the cell surface drags immunocomplexes toward the flagellar pocket, where they are internalized. The flagellar pocket is the sole site of endo- and exocytosis in this organism. After internalization, VSG is rapidly recycled back to the surface, whereas host antibodies are thought to be transported to the lysosome for degradation. For this essential step to work, effective machineries for both sorting and recycling of VSGs must have evolved in trypanosomes. Our understanding of the mechanisms behind VSG recycling and VSG secretion, is by far not complete. This review provides an overview of the trypanosome secretory and endosomal pathways. Longstanding questions are pinpointed that, with the advent of novel technologies, might be answered in the near future.


mBio ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Balázs Szöőr ◽  
Dorina V. Simon ◽  
Federico Rojas ◽  
Julie Young ◽  
Derrick R. Robinson ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Glycosomes are peroxisome-related organelles that compartmentalize the glycolytic enzymes in kinetoplastid parasites. These organelles are developmentally regulated in their number and composition, allowing metabolic adaptation to the parasite’s needs in the blood of mammalian hosts or within their arthropod vector. A protein phosphatase cascade regulates differentiation between parasite developmental forms, comprising a tyrosine phosphatase, Trypanosoma brucei PTP1 (TbPTP1), which dephosphorylates and inhibits a serine threonine phosphatase, TbPIP39, which promotes differentiation. When TbPTP1 is inactivated, TbPIP39 is activated and during differentiation becomes located in glycosomes. Here we have tracked TbPIP39 recruitment to glycosomes during differentiation from bloodstream “stumpy” forms to procyclic forms. Detailed microscopy and live-cell imaging during the synchronous transition between life cycle stages revealed that in stumpy forms, TbPIP39 is located at a periflagellar pocket site closely associated with TbVAP, which defines the flagellar pocket endoplasmic reticulum. TbPTP1 is also located at the same site in stumpy forms, as is REG9.1, a regulator of stumpy-enriched mRNAs. This site provides a molecular node for the interaction between TbPTP1 and TbPIP39. Within 30 min of the initiation of differentiation, TbPIP39 relocates to glycosomes, whereas TbPTP1 disperses to the cytosol. Overall, the study identifies a “stumpy regulatory nexus” (STuRN) that coordinates the molecular components of life cycle signaling and glycosomal development during transmission of Trypanosoma brucei. IMPORTANCE African trypanosomes are parasites of sub-Saharan Africa responsible for both human and animal disease. The parasites are transmitted by tsetse flies, and completion of their life cycle involves progression through several development steps. The initiation of differentiation between blood and tsetse fly forms is signaled by a phosphatase cascade, ultimately trafficked into peroxisome-related organelles called glycosomes that are unique to this group of organisms. Glycosomes undergo substantial remodeling of their composition and function during the differentiation step, but how this is regulated is not understood. Here we identify a cytological site where the signaling molecules controlling differentiation converge before the dispersal of one of them into glycosomes. In combination, the study provides the first insight into the spatial coordination of signaling pathway components in trypanosomes as they undergo cell-type differentiation.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian L. Weiss ◽  
Michele A. Maltz ◽  
Aurélien Vigneron ◽  
Yineng Wu ◽  
Katharine Walter ◽  
...  

AbstractTsetse flies (Glossina spp.) vector pathogenic trypanosomes (Trypanosoma spp.) in sub-Saharan Africa. These parasites cause human and animal African trypanosomiases, which are debilitating diseases that inflict an enormous socio-economic burden on inhabitants of endemic regions. Current disease control strategies rely primarily on treating infected animals and reducing tsetse population densities. However, relevant programs are costly, labor intensive and difficult to sustain. As such, novel strategies aimed at reducing tsetse vector competence require development. Herein we investigated whether an Enterobacter bacterium (Esp_Z), which confers Anopheles gambiae with resistance to Plasmodium, is able to colonize tsetse and induce a trypanosome refractory phenotype in the fly. Esp_Z established stable infections in tsetse’s gut, and exhibited no adverse effect on the survival of individuals from either group. Flies with established Esp_Z infections in their gut were significantly more refractory to infection with two distinct trypanosome species (T. congolense, 6% infection; T. brucei, 32% infection) than were age-matched flies that did not house the exogenous bacterium (T. congolense, 36% infected; T. brucei, 70% infected). Additionally, 52% of Esp_Z colonized tsetse survived infection with entomopathogenic Serratia marcescens, compared with only 9% of their wild-type counterparts. These parasite and pathogen refractory phenotypes result from the fact that Esp_Z acidifies tsetse’s midgut environment, which inhibits trypanosome and Serratia growth and thus infection establishment. Finally, we determined that Esp_Z infection does not impact the fecundity of male or female tsetse, nor the ability of male flies to compete with their wild-type counterparts for mates. We propose that Esp_Z could be used as one component of an integrated strategy aimed at reducing the ability of tsetse to transmit pathogenic trypanosomes.Author SummaryTsetse flies transmit pathogenic African trypanosomes, which are the causative agents of socio-economically devastating human and animal African trypanosomiases. These diseases are currently controlled in large part by reducing the population size of tsetse vectors through the use of insecticides, traps and sterile insect technique. However, logistic and monetary hurdles often preclude the prolonged application of procedures necessary to maintain these control programs. Thus, novel strategies, including those aimed at sustainably reducing the ability of tsetse to transmit trypanosomes, are presently under development. Herein we stably colonize tsetse flies with a bacterium (Enterobacter sp. Z, Esp_Z) that acidifies their midgut, thus rendering the environment inhospitable to infection with two distinct, epidemiologically important trypanosome strains as well as an entomopathogenic bacteria. In addition to inducing a trypanosome refractory phenotype, colonization of tsetse with Esp_Z exerts only a modest fitness cost on the fly. Taken together, these findings suggest that Esp_Z could be applied to enhance the effectiveness of currently employed tsetse control programs.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Silva Pereira ◽  
Kayo J. G. de Almeida Castilho Neto ◽  
Craig W. Duffy ◽  
Peter Richards ◽  
Harry Noyes ◽  
...  

African trypanosomes are vector-borne haemoparasites that cause African trypanosomiasis in humans and animals. Parasite survival in the bloodstream depends on immune evasion, achieved by antigenic variation of the Variant Surface Glycoprotein (VSG) coating the trypanosome cell surface. Recombination, or rather directed gene conversion, is fundamental in Trypanosoma brucei, as both a mechanism of VSG gene switching and of generating antigenic diversity during infections. Trypanosoma vivax is a related, livestock pathogen also displaying antigenic variation, but whose VSG lack key structures necessary for gene conversion in T. brucei. Thus, this study tests a long-standing prediction that T. vivax has a more restricted antigenic repertoire. Here we show that global VSG repertoire is broadly conserved across diverse T. vivax clinical strains. We use sequence mapping, coalescent approaches and experimental infections to show that recombination plays little, if any, role in diversifying T. vivax VSG sequences. These results explain interspecific differences in disease, such as propensity for self-cure, and indicate that either T. vivax has an alternate mechanism for immune evasion or else a distinct transmission strategy that reduces its reliance on long-term persistence. The lack of recombination driving antigenic diversity in T. vivax has immediate consequences for both the current mechanistic model of antigenic variation in African trypanosomes and species differences in virulence and transmission strategy, requiring us to reconsider the wider epidemiology of animal African trypanosomiasis.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Balázs Szöőr ◽  
Dorina V. Simon ◽  
Federico Rojas ◽  
Julie Young ◽  
Derrick R. Robinson ◽  
...  

AbstractGlycosomes are peroxisome-related organelles that compartmentalise the glycolytic enzymes in kinetoplastid parasites. These organelles are developmentally regulated in their number and composition, allowing metabolic adaptation to the parasite’s needs in the blood of mammalian hosts or within their arthropod vector. A protein phosphatase cascade regulates differentiation between parasite developmental forms, comprising a tyrosine phosphatase, TbPTP1, that dephosphorylates and inhibits a serine threonine phosphatase TbPIP39 that promotes differentiation. When TbPTP1 is inactivated, TbPIP39 is activated and during differentiation becomes located in glycosomes. Here we have tracked TbPIP39 recruitment to glycosomes during differentiation from bloodstream stumpy forms to procyclic forms. Detailed microscopy and live cell imaging during the synchronous transition between life cycle stages revealed that in stumpy forms, TbPIP39 is located at a periflagellar pocket site closely associated with TbVAP, that defines the flagellar pocket endoplasmic reticulum. TbPTP1 is also located at the same site in stumpy forms, as is REG9.1, a regulator of stumpy-enriched mRNAs. This site provides a molecular node for the interaction between TbPTP1 and TbPIP39. Within 30 minutes of the initiation of differentiation TbPIP39 relocates to glycosomes whereas TbPTP1 disperses to the cytosol. Overall, the study identifies a ‘stumpy regulatory nexus’ (STuRN) that co-ordinates the molecular components of life cycle signalling and glycosomal development during transmission ofTrypanosoma brucei.ImportanceAfrican trypanosomes are parasites of sub-Saharan Africa responsible for both human and animal disease. The parasites are transmitted by tsetse flies and completion of their life cycle involves progression through several development steps. The initiation of differentiation between blood and tsetse forms is signalled by a phosphatase cascade, ultimately trafficked into peroxisome-related organelles called glycosomes that are unique to this group of organisms. Glycosomes undergo substantial remodelling of their composition and function during the differentiation step but how this is regulated is not understood. Here we identify a cytological site where the signalling molecules controlling differentiation converge before the dispersal of one of them into glycosomes. This coincides with a specialised ER site that may contribute to glycosome developmental biogenesis or regeneration. In combination, the study provides the first insight into the spatial co-ordination of signalling pathway components in trypanosomes as they undergo cell-type differentiation.


2003 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mihaela Lorger ◽  
Markus Engstler ◽  
Matthias Homann ◽  
H. Ulrich Göringer

ABSTRACT African trypanosomes cause sleeping sickness in humans and Nagana in cattle. The parasites multiply in the blood and escape the immune response of the infected host by antigenic variation. Antigenic variation is characterized by a periodic change of the parasite protein surface, which consists of a variant glycoprotein known as variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). Using a SELEX (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) approach, we report the selection of small, serum-stable RNAs, so-called aptamers, that bind to VSGs with subnanomolar affinity. The RNAs are able to recognize different VSG variants and bind to the surface of live trypanosomes. Aptamers tethered to an antigenic side group are capable of directing antibodies to the surface of the parasite in vitro. In this manner, the RNAs might provide a new strategy for a therapeutic intervention to fight sleeping sickness.


Parasitology ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 134 (6) ◽  
pp. 827-831 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. T. MacLEOD ◽  
I. MAUDLIN ◽  
A. C. DARBY ◽  
S. C. WELBURN

SUMMARYEfficient, cyclical transmission of trypanosomes through tsetse flies is central to maintenance of human sleeping sickness and nagana across sub-Saharan Africa. Infection rates in tsetse are normally very low as most parasites ingested with the fly bloodmeal die in the fly gut, displaying the characteristics of apoptotic cells. Here we show that a range of antioxidants (glutathione, cysteine, N-acetyl-cysteine, ascorbic acid and uric acid), when added to the insect bloodmeal, can dramatically inhibit cell death of Trypanosoma brucei brucei in tsetse. Both L- and D-cysteine invoked similar effects suggesting that inhibition of trypanosome death is not dependent on protein synthesis. The present work suggests that antioxidants reduce the midgut environment protecting trypanosomes from cell death induced by reactive oxygen species.


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