bradyzoite differentiation
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mBio ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Mayoral ◽  
Peter Shamamian ◽  
Louis M. Weiss

ABSTRACT The ubiquitous parasite Toxoplasma gondii exhibits an impressive ability to maintain chronic infection of its host for prolonged periods. Despite this, little is known regarding whether and how T. gondii bradyzoites, a quasi-dormant life stage residing within intracellular cysts, manipulate the host cell to maintain persistent infection. A previous proteomic study of the cyst wall, an amorphous layer of proteins that forms underneath the cyst membrane, identified MYR1 as a putative cyst wall protein in vitro. Because MYR1 is known to be involved in the translocation of parasite-derived effector proteins into the host cell, we sought to determine whether parasites transitioning toward the bradyzoite life stage retain the capacity to translocate proteins via this pathway. By epitope tagging the endogenous loci of four known effectors that translocate from the parasitophorous vacuole into the host cell nucleus, we show, by immunofluorescence assays, that most effectors accumulate in the host nucleus at early but not late time points after infection, during the tachyzoite-to-bradyzoite transition and when parasites further along the bradyzoite differentiation continuum invade a new host cell. We demonstrate that the suppression of interferon gamma signaling, which was previously shown to be mediated by the effector TgIST, also occurs in the context of prolonged infection with bradyzoites and that TgIST export is a process that occurs beyond the early stages of host cell infection. These findings have important implications regarding how this highly successful parasite maintains persistent infection of its host. IMPORTANCE Toxoplasma bradyzoites persist within tissue cysts and are refractory to current treatments, serving as a reservoir for acute complications in settings of compromised immunity. Much remains to be understood regarding how this life stage successfully establishes and maintains persistent infection. In this study, we investigated whether the export of parasite effector proteins into the host cell occurs during the development of in vitro tissue cysts. We quantified the presence of four previously described effectors in host cell nuclei at different time points after bradyzoite differentiation and found that they accumulated largely during the early stages of infection. Despite a decline in nuclear accumulation, we found that one of these effectors still mediated its function after prolonged infection with bradyzoites, and we provide evidence that this effector is exported beyond early infection stages. These findings suggest that effector export from within developing tissue cysts provides one potential mechanism by which this parasite achieves chronic infection.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Mayoral ◽  
Peter Shamamian ◽  
Louis M. Weiss

ABSTRACTThe ubiquitous parasite Toxoplasma gondii exhibits an impressive ability to maintain a chronic infection of its host for prolonged periods. Despite this, little is known regarding if and how T. gondii bradyzoites, a quasi-dormant life-stage residing within intracellular cysts, manipulate the host cell so as to maintain a persistent infection. A previous proteomic study of the cyst wall, an amorphous layer of proteins that forms underneath the cyst membrane, identified MYR1 as a putative cyst wall protein in vitro. As MYR1 is known to be involved in the translocation of parasite derived effector proteins into the host cell, we sought to determine whether parasites transitioning toward the bradyzoite life stage retain the capacity to translocate proteins via this pathway. By epitope tagging the endogenous loci of four known effectors that translocate from the parasitophorous vacuole into the host cell nucleus, we show by immunofluorescence that most effectors accumulate in the host nucleus at early but not late timepoints post-infection during the tachyzoite to bradyzoite transition and when parasites farther along the bradyzoite differentiation continuum invade a new host cell. We demonstrate that the suppression of interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) signaling, previously shown to be mediated by the effector TgIST, also occurs in the context of prolonged infection with bradyzoites, and that TgIST export is a process that occurs beyond the early stages of host cell infection. These findings have important implications as to how this highly successful parasite maintains a persistent infection of its host.IMPORTANCEToxoplasma bradyzoites persist within tissue cysts and are refractory to current treatments, serving as a reservoir for acute complications in settings of compromised immunity. Much remains to be understood regarding how this life-stage successfully establishes and maintains a persistent infection. In this study, we investigated whether the export of parasite effector proteins into the host cell occurs during the development of in vitro tissue cysts. We quantified the presence of four previously described effectors in host cell nuclei at different timepoints post-bradyzoite differentiation and found that they accumulate largely during the early stages of infection. Despite a decline in nuclear accumulation, we found that one of these effectors still mediates its function after prolonged infection with bradyzoites and provide evidence that this effector is exported beyond early infection stages. These findings suggest that effector export from within developing tissue cysts provides one potential mechanism by which this parasite achieves chronic infection.


Author(s):  
Joshua Mayoral ◽  
Manlio Di Cristina ◽  
Vern B. Carruthers ◽  
Louis M. Weiss

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 89
Author(s):  
Suri Dwi Lesmana

Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular parasite whose definite host is cat or felidae and intermediate host is human orother mammals. It causes congenital and acquisita toxoplasmosis. Infection with this apicomplexan parasite results inits dissemination throughout its host via the tachyzoite life stage. After dissemination, these tachyzoites differentiateinto bradyzoites within cyst and remain latent. These bradyzoites can transform back into tachyzoites and inimmunosupressed individuals this often results in symptomatic disease. Both tachyzoites and bradyzoites develop intissue culture and this crucial differentiation event can be studied. Interferon gamma (IFN ) is the main mediator intachyzoite-bradyzoite differentiation.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. e0173745 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdelbaset E. Abdelbaset ◽  
Barbara A. Fox ◽  
Mohamed H. Karram ◽  
Mahmoud R. Abd Ellah ◽  
David J. Bzik ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua B. Radke ◽  
Danielle Worth ◽  
Dong-Pyo Hong ◽  
Sherri Huang ◽  
William J. Sullivan ◽  
...  

AbstractBradyzoite differentiation is marked by major changes in gene expression resulting in a parasite that expresses a new repertoire of surface antigens hidden inside a modified parasitophorous vacuole called the tissue cyst. The factors that control this important life cycle transition are not well understood. Here we describe an importantToxoplasmatranscriptional repressor mechanism controlling bradyzoite differentiation that operates exclusively in the tachyzoite stage. The ApiAP2 factor, AP2IV-4, is a nuclear factor dynamically expressed in late S phase through mitosis/cytokinesis of the tachyzoite cell cycle. Remarkably, deletion of the AP2IV-4 locus resulted in the increased expression of bradyzoite mRNAs in replicating tachyzoites, and in two different genetic lineages we confirmed the misexpression of tissue cyst wall components (e.g. BPK1, MCP4, CST1) and the bradyzoite surface antigen SRS9 in the tachyzoite stage. In the murine animal model, the loss of AP2IV-4 had profound biological consequences. Type II prugniaud strain parasites lacking AP2IV-4 were unable to form tissue cysts in brain tissue and the absence of this factor also recruited a potent immune response characterized by increases inflammatory monocytes, IFN-γ and higher numbers of both CD8+ and CD4+ T-cells. Altogether, these results indicate that suppression of bradyzoite antigens by AP2IV-4 during acute infection is required forToxoplasmato establish a chronic infection in the immune-competent host.Author SummaryTheToxoplasmabiology that underlies the establishment of a chronic infection is developmental conversion of the acute tachyzoite stage into the latent bradyzoite-tissue cyst stage. Despite the important clinical consequences of this developmental pathway, the molecular basis of the switch mechanisms that control formation of the tissue cyst is still poorly understood. A fundamental feature of tissue cyst formation is the expression of bradyzoite-specific genes. Here we show the transcription factor AP2IV-4 directly silences bradyzoite mRNA and protein expression in the acute tachyzoite stage demonstrating that developmental control of tissue cyst formation is as much about when not to express bradyzoite genes as it is about when to activate them. Loosing the suppression of bradyzoite gene expression in the acute tachyzoite stage caused by deleting AP2IV-4 blocked the establishment of chronic disease in healthy animals through the pre-arming of the immune system suggesting a possible strategy for preventing chronicToxoplasmainfections.


mBio ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatsuki Sugi ◽  
Yan Fen Ma ◽  
Tadakimi Tomita ◽  
Fumi Murakoshi ◽  
Michael S. Eaton ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTToxoplasma gondiiis an obligate intracellular apicomplexan parasite that infects warm-blooded vertebrates, including humans. Asexual reproduction inT. gondiiallows it to switch between the rapidly replicating tachyzoite and quiescent bradyzoite life cycle stages. A transient cyclic AMP (cAMP) pulse promotes bradyzoite differentiation, whereas a prolonged elevation of cAMP inhibits this process. We investigated the mechanism(s) by which differential modulation of cAMP exerts a bidirectional effect on parasite differentiation. There are three protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunits (TgPKAc1 to -3) expressed inT. gondii. UnlikeTgPKAc1 andTgPKAc2, which are conserved in the phylum Apicomplexa,TgPKAc3 appears evolutionarily divergent and specific to coccidian parasites.TgPKAc1 andTgPKAc2 are distributed in the cytomembranes, whereasTgPKAc3 resides in the cytosol.TgPKAc3 was genetically ablated in a type II cyst-forming strain ofT. gondii(PruΔku80Δhxgprt) and in a type I strain (RHΔku80Δhxgprt), which typically does not form cysts. The Δpkac3mutant exhibited slower growth than the parental and complemented strains, which correlated with a higher basal rate of tachyzoite-to-bradyzoite differentiation. 3-Isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) treatment, which elevates cAMP levels, maintained wild-type parasites as tachyzoites under bradyzoite induction culture conditions (pH 8.2/low CO2), whereas the Δpkac3mutant failed to respond to the treatment. This suggests thatTgPKAc3 is the factor responsible for the cAMP-dependent tachyzoite maintenance. In addition, the Δpkac3mutant had a defect in the production of brain cystsin vivo, suggesting that a substrate ofTgPKAc3 is probably involved in the persistence of this parasite in the intermediate host animals.IMPORTANCEToxoplasma gondiiis one of the most prevalent eukaryotic parasites in mammals, including humans. Parasites can switch from rapidly replicating tachyzoites responsible for acute infection to slowly replicating bradyzoites that persist as a latent infection. Previous studies have demonstrated thatT. gondiicAMP signaling can induce or suppress bradyzoite differentiation, depending on the strength and duration of cAMP signal. Here, we report thatTgPKAc3 is responsible for cAMP-dependent tachyzoite maintenance while suppressing differentiation into bradyzoites, revealing one mechanism underlying how this parasite transduces cAMP signals during differentiation.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. e0120331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anahi V. Odell ◽  
Fanny Tran ◽  
Jenna E. Foderaro ◽  
Séverine Poupart ◽  
Ravi Pathak ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 464 ◽  
pp. 9-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatsuki Sugi ◽  
Tatsunori Masatani ◽  
Fumi Murakoshi ◽  
Shin-ichiro Kawazu ◽  
Kentaro Kato

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