1. Toxoplasma TgATG9 is critical for autophagy and long-term persistence in tissue cysts
- Author
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David Smith, Manlio Di Cristina, Vern B. Carruthers, Geetha Kannan, Isabelle Coppens, Patrick A Rimple, Fengrong Wang, Sébastien Besteiro, Aude Cerutti, Tracey L. Schultz, Einar B. Ólafsson, Hoa Mai Nguyen, and Nayanna M Mercado Soto
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Protozoan Proteins ,Cellular homeostasis ,Cyst ,Biology (General) ,Microbiology and Infectious Disease ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Virulence ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Mitochondria ,Cell biology ,apicomplexa ,Toxoplasmosis, Cerebral ,parasite ,Medicine ,Female ,Toxoplasma ,ATG9 ,Research Article ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Population ,Toxoplasma gondii ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell Line ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Apicomplexa ,03 medical and health sciences ,Organelle ,parasitic diseases ,Autophagy ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,030304 developmental biology ,Life Cycle Stages ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,protozoan ,Membrane Proteins ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,chronic infection ,Disease Models, Animal ,Cytoplasm ,Vacuoles ,Mice, Inbred CBA ,Other - Abstract
Many of the world’s warm-blooded species are chronically infected with Toxoplasma gondii tissue cysts, including an estimated one-third of the global human population. The cellular processes that permit long-term persistence within the cyst are largely unknown for T. gondii and related coccidian parasites that impact human and animal health. Herein, we show that genetic ablation of TgATG9 substantially reduces canonical autophagy and compromises bradyzoite viability. Transmission electron microscopy revealed numerous structural abnormalities occurring in ∆atg9 bradyzoites. Intriguingly, abnormal mitochondrial networks were observed in TgATG9-deficient bradyzoites, some of which contained numerous different cytoplasmic components and organelles. ∆atg9 bradyzoite fitness was drastically compromised in vitro and in mice, with very few brain cysts identified in mice 5 weeks post-infection. Taken together, our data suggests that TgATG9, and by extension autophagy, is critical for cellular homeostasis in bradyzoites and is necessary for long-term persistence within the cyst of this coccidian parasite.
- Published
- 2021