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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Sep 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39282379

RESUMEN

The contribution of amylopectin granules (AG), comprised of a branched chain storage homopolymer of glucose, to the maintenance and progression of the chronic Toxoplasma gondii infection has remained undefined. Here we describe the role of AG in the physiology of encysted bradyzoites by using a custom developed imaging-based application AmyloQuant that permitted quantification of relative levels of AG within in vivo derived tissue cysts during the initiation and maturation of the chronic infection. Our findings establish that AG are dynamic entities, exhibiting considerable heterogeneity among tissue cysts at all post infection time points examined. Quantification of relative AG levels within tissue cysts exposes a previously unrecognized temporal cycle defined by distinct phases of AG accumulation and utilization over the first 6 weeks of the chronic phase. This AG cycle is temporally coordinated with overall bradyzoite mitochondrial activity implicating amylopectin in the maintenance and progression of the chronic infection. In addition, the staging of AG accumulation and it rapid utilization within encysted bradyzoites was associated with a burst of coordinated replication. As such our findings suggest that AG levels within individual bradyzoites, and across bradyzoites within tissue cysts may represent a key component in the licensing of bradyzoite replication, intimately linking stored metabolic potential to the course of the chronic infection. This extends the impact of AG beyond the previously assigned role that focused exclusively on parasite transmission. These findings force a fundamental reassessment of the chronic Toxoplasma infection, highlighting the critical need to address the temporal evolution of this crucial stage in the parasite life cycle.

2.
Infect Immun ; 91(7): e0056622, 2023 07 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37358419

RESUMEN

Recent advances into the unique biology of Toxoplasma tissue cysts and the bradyzoites they house necessitate optimization of tissue cyst recovery from infected mouse brains. Here, we present data from 83 tissue cyst purifications of Type II ME49 tissue cysts in CBA/J mice performed over a period of 3 years. The effects of infection with both tissue culture tachyzoites as well as ex vivo tissue cysts were assessed. Significant mortality was restricted to tachyzoite infections with female mice being more susceptible. Infection with tissue cysts was associated with both lower overall symptomology and mortality, exhibiting no sex bias. Cumulatively, host sex did not impact overall tissue cyst yields, although tachyzoite-initiated infections generated significantly higher yields compared to tissue cyst-initiated infections. Notably, serial passage of tissue cysts was accompanied with a decreasing trend for subsequent cyst recovery. The time of tissue cyst harvest, a potential reflection of bradyzoite physiological state, had no significant impact on subsequent cyst yield at the selected time points. In aggregate, these data reveal the considerable heterogeneity associated with tissue cyst yield, making the design of adequately powered experiments critical. This is particularly the case for drug studies where overall tissue cyst burden is currently the primary and often sole metric of efficacy, as the data presented here demonstrate that cyst recovery between preparations of untreated animals can mirror and even exceed the reported effects of drug treatment.


Asunto(s)
Toxoplasma , Toxoplasmosis , Ratones , Femenino , Animales , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Toxoplasma/fisiología
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