Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.

Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular parasite that establishes a long-term infection in the brain of many warm-blooded hosts, including humans and rodents. Like all obligate intracellular microbes, Toxoplasma uses many effector proteins to manipulate the host cell to ensure parasite survival. While...

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Main Authors: Emily F Merritt, Joshua A Kochanowsky, Perrine Hervé, Alison A Watson, Anita A Koshy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0300764&type=printable
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author Emily F Merritt
Joshua A Kochanowsky
Perrine Hervé
Alison A Watson
Anita A Koshy
author_facet Emily F Merritt
Joshua A Kochanowsky
Perrine Hervé
Alison A Watson
Anita A Koshy
author_sort Emily F Merritt
collection DOAJ
description Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular parasite that establishes a long-term infection in the brain of many warm-blooded hosts, including humans and rodents. Like all obligate intracellular microbes, Toxoplasma uses many effector proteins to manipulate the host cell to ensure parasite survival. While some of these effector proteins are universal to all Toxoplasma strains, some are polymorphic between Toxoplasma strains. One such polymorphic effector is GRA15. The gra15 allele carried by type II strains activates host NF-κB signaling, leading to the release of cytokines such as IL-12, TNF, and IL-1β from immune cells infected with type II parasites. Prior work also suggested that GRA15 promotes early host control of parasites in vivo, but the effect of GRA15 on parasite persistence in the brain and the peripheral immune response has not been well defined. For this reason, we sought to address this gap by generating a new IIΔgra15 strain and comparing outcomes at 3 weeks post infection between WT and IIΔgra15 infected mice. We found that the brain parasite burden and the number of macrophages/microglia and T cells in the brain did not differ between WT and IIΔgra15 infected mice. In addition, while IIΔgra15 infected mice had a lower number and frequency of splenic M1-like macrophages and frequency of PD-1+ CTLA-4+ CD4+ T cells and NK cells compared to WT infected mice, the IFN-γ+ CD4 and CD8 T cell populations were equivalent. In summary, our results suggest that in vivo GRA15 may have a subtle effect on the peripheral immune response, but this effect is not strong enough to alter brain parasite burden or parenchymal immune cell number at 3 weeks post infection.
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spelling doaj.art-b4ba03fe41214b48bebf275278e874432024-04-04T05:34:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-01193e030076410.1371/journal.pone.0300764Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.Emily F MerrittJoshua A KochanowskyPerrine HervéAlison A WatsonAnita A KoshyToxoplasma gondii is an intracellular parasite that establishes a long-term infection in the brain of many warm-blooded hosts, including humans and rodents. Like all obligate intracellular microbes, Toxoplasma uses many effector proteins to manipulate the host cell to ensure parasite survival. While some of these effector proteins are universal to all Toxoplasma strains, some are polymorphic between Toxoplasma strains. One such polymorphic effector is GRA15. The gra15 allele carried by type II strains activates host NF-κB signaling, leading to the release of cytokines such as IL-12, TNF, and IL-1β from immune cells infected with type II parasites. Prior work also suggested that GRA15 promotes early host control of parasites in vivo, but the effect of GRA15 on parasite persistence in the brain and the peripheral immune response has not been well defined. For this reason, we sought to address this gap by generating a new IIΔgra15 strain and comparing outcomes at 3 weeks post infection between WT and IIΔgra15 infected mice. We found that the brain parasite burden and the number of macrophages/microglia and T cells in the brain did not differ between WT and IIΔgra15 infected mice. In addition, while IIΔgra15 infected mice had a lower number and frequency of splenic M1-like macrophages and frequency of PD-1+ CTLA-4+ CD4+ T cells and NK cells compared to WT infected mice, the IFN-γ+ CD4 and CD8 T cell populations were equivalent. In summary, our results suggest that in vivo GRA15 may have a subtle effect on the peripheral immune response, but this effect is not strong enough to alter brain parasite burden or parenchymal immune cell number at 3 weeks post infection.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0300764&type=printable
spellingShingle Emily F Merritt
Joshua A Kochanowsky
Perrine Hervé
Alison A Watson
Anita A Koshy
Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.
PLoS ONE
title Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.
title_full Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.
title_fullStr Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.
title_full_unstemmed Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.
title_short Toxoplasma type II effector GRA15 has limited influence in vivo.
title_sort toxoplasma type ii effector gra15 has limited influence in vivo
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0300764&type=printable
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