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The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming

Evolve and resequencing (E&R) was applied to lab adaptation of Toxoplasma gondii for over 1,500 generations with the goal of mapping host-independent in vitro virulence traits. Phenotypic assessments of steps across the lytic cycle revealed that only traits needed in the extracellular milieu evo...

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Autores principales: Primo, Vincent A., Rezvani, Yasaman, Farrell, Andrew, Murphy, Connor Q., Lou, Jingjing, Vajdi, Amir, Marth, Gabor T., Zarringhalam, Kourosh, Gubbels, Marc-Jan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8651083/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34874774
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01196-21
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author Primo, Vincent A.
Rezvani, Yasaman
Farrell, Andrew
Murphy, Connor Q.
Lou, Jingjing
Vajdi, Amir
Marth, Gabor T.
Zarringhalam, Kourosh
Gubbels, Marc-Jan
author_facet Primo, Vincent A.
Rezvani, Yasaman
Farrell, Andrew
Murphy, Connor Q.
Lou, Jingjing
Vajdi, Amir
Marth, Gabor T.
Zarringhalam, Kourosh
Gubbels, Marc-Jan
author_sort Primo, Vincent A.
collection PubMed
description Evolve and resequencing (E&R) was applied to lab adaptation of Toxoplasma gondii for over 1,500 generations with the goal of mapping host-independent in vitro virulence traits. Phenotypic assessments of steps across the lytic cycle revealed that only traits needed in the extracellular milieu evolved. Nonsynonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in only one gene, a P4 flippase, fixated across two different evolving populations, whereas dramatic changes in the transcriptional signature of extracellular parasites were identified. Newly developed computational tools correlated phenotypes evolving at different rates with specific transcriptomic changes. A set of 300 phenotype-associated genes was mapped, of which nearly 50% is annotated as hypothetical. Validation of a select number of genes by knockouts confirmed their role in lab adaptation and highlights novel mechanisms underlying in vitro virulence traits. Further analyses of differentially expressed genes revealed the development of a “pro-tachyzoite” profile as well as the upregulation of the fatty acid biosynthesis (FASII) pathway. The latter aligned with the P4 flippase SNP and aligned with a low abundance of medium-chain fatty acids at low passage, indicating this is a limiting factor in extracellular parasites. In addition, partial overlap with the bradyzoite differentiation transcriptome in extracellular parasites indicated that stress pathways are involved in both situations. This was reflected in the partial overlap between the assembled ApiAP2 and Myb transcription factor network underlying the adapting extracellular state with the bradyzoite differentiation program. Overall, E&R is a new genomic tool successfully applied to map the development of polygenic traits underlying in vitro virulence of T. gondii. IMPORTANCE It has been well established that prolonged in vitro cultivation of Toxoplasma gondii augments progression of the lytic cycle. This lab adaptation results in increased capacities to divide, migrate, and survive outside a host cell, all of which are considered host-independent virulence factors. However, the mechanistic basis underlying these enhanced virulence features is unknown. Here, E&R was utilized to empirically characterize the phenotypic, genomic, and transcriptomic changes in the non-lab-adapted strain, GT1, during 2.5 years of lab adaptation. This identified the shutdown of stage differentiation and upregulation of lipid biosynthetic pathways as the key processes being modulated. Furthermore, lab adaptation was primarily driven by transcriptional reprogramming, which rejected the starting hypothesis that genetic mutations would drive lab adaptation. Overall, the work empirically shows that lab adaptation augments T. gondii’s in vitro virulence by transcriptional reprogramming and that E&R is a powerful new tool to map multigenic traits.
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spelling pubmed-86510832021-12-16 The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming Primo, Vincent A. Rezvani, Yasaman Farrell, Andrew Murphy, Connor Q. Lou, Jingjing Vajdi, Amir Marth, Gabor T. Zarringhalam, Kourosh Gubbels, Marc-Jan mSystems Research Article Evolve and resequencing (E&R) was applied to lab adaptation of Toxoplasma gondii for over 1,500 generations with the goal of mapping host-independent in vitro virulence traits. Phenotypic assessments of steps across the lytic cycle revealed that only traits needed in the extracellular milieu evolved. Nonsynonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in only one gene, a P4 flippase, fixated across two different evolving populations, whereas dramatic changes in the transcriptional signature of extracellular parasites were identified. Newly developed computational tools correlated phenotypes evolving at different rates with specific transcriptomic changes. A set of 300 phenotype-associated genes was mapped, of which nearly 50% is annotated as hypothetical. Validation of a select number of genes by knockouts confirmed their role in lab adaptation and highlights novel mechanisms underlying in vitro virulence traits. Further analyses of differentially expressed genes revealed the development of a “pro-tachyzoite” profile as well as the upregulation of the fatty acid biosynthesis (FASII) pathway. The latter aligned with the P4 flippase SNP and aligned with a low abundance of medium-chain fatty acids at low passage, indicating this is a limiting factor in extracellular parasites. In addition, partial overlap with the bradyzoite differentiation transcriptome in extracellular parasites indicated that stress pathways are involved in both situations. This was reflected in the partial overlap between the assembled ApiAP2 and Myb transcription factor network underlying the adapting extracellular state with the bradyzoite differentiation program. Overall, E&R is a new genomic tool successfully applied to map the development of polygenic traits underlying in vitro virulence of T. gondii. IMPORTANCE It has been well established that prolonged in vitro cultivation of Toxoplasma gondii augments progression of the lytic cycle. This lab adaptation results in increased capacities to divide, migrate, and survive outside a host cell, all of which are considered host-independent virulence factors. However, the mechanistic basis underlying these enhanced virulence features is unknown. Here, E&R was utilized to empirically characterize the phenotypic, genomic, and transcriptomic changes in the non-lab-adapted strain, GT1, during 2.5 years of lab adaptation. This identified the shutdown of stage differentiation and upregulation of lipid biosynthetic pathways as the key processes being modulated. Furthermore, lab adaptation was primarily driven by transcriptional reprogramming, which rejected the starting hypothesis that genetic mutations would drive lab adaptation. Overall, the work empirically shows that lab adaptation augments T. gondii’s in vitro virulence by transcriptional reprogramming and that E&R is a powerful new tool to map multigenic traits. American Society for Microbiology 2021-12-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8651083/ /pubmed/34874774 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01196-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Primo et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Primo, Vincent A.
Rezvani, Yasaman
Farrell, Andrew
Murphy, Connor Q.
Lou, Jingjing
Vajdi, Amir
Marth, Gabor T.
Zarringhalam, Kourosh
Gubbels, Marc-Jan
The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming
title The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming
title_full The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming
title_fullStr The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming
title_full_unstemmed The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming
title_short The Extracellular Milieu of Toxoplasma's Lytic Cycle Drives Lab Adaptation, Primarily by Transcriptional Reprogramming
title_sort extracellular milieu of toxoplasma's lytic cycle drives lab adaptation, primarily by transcriptional reprogramming
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8651083/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34874774
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01196-21
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