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TORC1 is an essential regulator of nutrient-controlled proliferation and differentiation in Leishmania.

Elmarie MyburghVincent GeogheganEliza Vc Alves-FerreiraYesica Romina NievasJaspreet S GrewalElaine BrownKaren McLuskeyJeremy C Mottram
Published in: EMBO reports (2024)
Leishmania parasites undergo differentiation between various proliferating and non-dividing forms to adapt to changing host environments. The mechanisms that link environmental cues with the parasite's developmental changes remain elusive. Here, we report that Leishmania TORC1 is a key environmental sensor for parasite proliferation and differentiation in the sand fly-stage promastigotes and for replication of mammalian-stage amastigotes. We show that Leishmania RPTOR1, interacts with TOR1 and LST8, and identify new parasite-specific proteins that interact in this complex. We investigate TORC1 function by conditional deletion of RPTOR1, where under nutrient-rich conditions RPTOR1 depletion results in decreased protein synthesis and growth, G1 cell cycle arrest and premature differentiation from proliferative promastigotes to non-dividing mammalian-infective metacyclic forms. These parasites are unable to respond to nutrients to differentiate into proliferative retroleptomonads, which are required for their blood-meal induced amplification in sand flies and enhanced mammalian infectivity. We additionally show that RPTOR1 -/- metacyclic promastigotes develop into amastigotes but do not proliferate in the mammalian host to cause pathology. RPTOR1-dependent TORC1 functionality represents a critical mechanism for driving parasite growth and proliferation.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • life cycle
  • toxoplasma gondii
  • signaling pathway
  • trypanosoma cruzi
  • cell cycle arrest
  • drinking water
  • transcription factor
  • high glucose
  • drug induced
  • drosophila melanogaster
  • nucleic acid