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Toxoplasma gondii AP2XII-2 Contributes to Transcriptional Repression for Sexual Commitment

Sandeep Srivastava, Michael J. Holmes, Michael W. White, William J. Sullivan

2023mSphere40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Toxoplasma gondii is a parasite that undergoes its sexual stage exclusively in feline intestines, making cats a major source of transmission. A better understanding of the proteins controlling the parasite's life cycle stage transitions is needed for the development of new therapies aimed at treating toxoplasmosis and the transmission of the infection. Genes that regulate the sexual stages need to be turned on and off at the appropriate times, activities that are mediated by specific transcription factors that recruit general machinery to silence or activate gene expression. In this study, we identify a transcription factor called AP2XII-2 as being important for the repression of a subset of sexual stage genes, including a sexual stage-specific AP2 factor (AP2X-10) and a protein (AAH1) required to construct the infectious oocysts expelled from infected cats.

Topics & Concepts

Psychological repressionToxoplasma gondiiVirologyPsychologyBiologyGeneticsGeneAntibodyGene expressionToxoplasma gondii Research StudiesCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus researchHerpesvirus Infections and Treatments
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