Litcius/Paper detail

Trypanosoma cruzi amastigote transcriptome analysis reveals heterogenous populations with replicating and dormant parasites

Hans Desale, Claudia Herrera, Eric Dumonteil

2023Microbes and Infection11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Trypanosoma cruzi is a protozoan parasite causing Chagas disease, with a complex life cycle involving different stages in insect vectors and mammalian hosts. Amastigotes are an intracellular form that replicates in the cytoplasm of host cells, and recent studies suggested that dormant forms may be contributing to parasite persistence, suggesting cellular heterogeneity among amastigotes. We investigated here if a transcriptomic approach could identify some heterogeneity in intracellular amastigotes and identify a dormant population. We used gene expression data derived from bulk RNA-sequencing of T. cruzi infection of human fibroblasts for deconvolution using CDSeq, which allows to simultaneously estimate amastigote cell-type proportions and cell-type-specific expression profiles. Six amastigote subpopulations were identified, confirming intracellular amastigotes heterogeneity, and one population presented characteristics of non-replicative dormant parasites, based on replication markers and TcRAD51 expression. Transcriptomic approaches appear to be powerful to understand T. cruzi cell differentiation and expansion of these studies could provide further insight on the role different cell types in parasite persistence and Chagas disease pathogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAmastigoteTrypanosoma cruziTranscriptomePopulationCell biologyGene expressionIntracellularGeneParasite hostingGeneticsLeishmaniaSociologyComputer scienceDemographyWorld Wide WebTrypanosoma species research and implicationsResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences
Trypanosoma cruzi amastigote transcriptome analysis reveals heterogenous populations with replicating and dormant parasites | Litcius