The Toxoplasma oxygen-sensing protein, TgPhyA, is required for resistance to interferon gamma-mediated nutritional immunity in mice.
Charlotte CordonnierMsano MandalasiJason GigleyElizabeth A WohlfertChristopher M WestIra J BladerPublished in: PLoS biology (2024)
As Toxoplasma gondii disseminates through its host, the parasite must sense and adapt to its environment and scavenge nutrients. Oxygen (O2) is one such environmental factor and cytoplasmic prolyl 4-hydroxylases (PHDs) are evolutionarily conserved O2 cellular sensing proteins that regulate responses to changes in O2 availability. Toxoplasma expresses 2 PHDs. One of them, TgPHYa hydroxylates SKP1, a subunit of the SCF-E3 ubiquitin ligase complex. In vitro, TgPHYa is important for growth at low O2 levels. However, studies have yet to examine the role that TgPHYa or any other pathogen-encoded PHD plays in virulence and disease. Using a type II ME49 Toxoplasma TgPHYa knockout, we report that TgPHYa is important for Toxoplasma virulence and brain cyst formation in mice. We further find that while TgPHYa mutant parasites can establish an infection in the gut, they are unable to efficiently disseminate to peripheral tissues because the mutant parasites are unable to survive within recruited immune cells. Since this phenotype was abrogated in IFNγ knockout mice, we studied how TgPHYa mediates survival in IFNγ-treated cells. We find that TgPHYa is not required for release of parasite-encoded effectors into host cells that neutralize anti-parasitic processes induced by IFNγ. In contrast, we find that TgPHYa is required for the parasite to scavenge tryptophan, which is an amino acid whose levels are decreased after IFNγ up-regulates the tryptophan-catabolizing enzyme, indoleamine dioxygenase (IDO). We further find, relative to wild-type mice, that IDO knockout mice display increased morbidity when infected with TgPHYa knockout parasites. Together, these data identify the first parasite mechanism for evading IFNγ-induced nutritional immunity and highlight a novel role that oxygen-sensing proteins play in pathogen growth and virulence.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- toxoplasma gondii
- plasmodium falciparum
- dendritic cells
- immune response
- induced apoptosis
- escherichia coli
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- staphylococcus aureus
- amino acid
- biofilm formation
- antimicrobial resistance
- cell cycle arrest
- life cycle
- trypanosoma cruzi
- magnetic resonance
- gene expression
- cell death
- high fat diet induced
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- white matter
- transcription factor
- deep learning
- magnetic resonance imaging
- endothelial cells
- cell proliferation
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- brain injury
- resting state
- heavy metals
- functional connectivity
- diabetic rats
- artificial intelligence
- cerebral ischemia