Litcius/Paper detail

TgIF2K-B Is an eIF2α Kinase in Toxoplasma gondii That Responds to Oxidative Stress and Optimizes Pathogenicity

Leonardo Augusto, Jennifer Martynowicz, Parth H. Amin, Kenneth R. Carlson, Ronald C. Wek, William J. Sullivan

2021mBio38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

is a single-celled parasite that infects nucleated cells of warm-blooded vertebrates, including one-third of the human population. The parasites are not cleared by the immune response and persist in the host by converting into a latent tissue cyst form. Development of tissue cysts can be triggered by cellular stresses, which activate a family of TgIF2 kinases to phosphorylate the eukaryotic translation initiation factor TgIF2α. Here, we establish that the TgIF2 kinase TgIF2K-B is activated by oxidative stress and is critical for maintaining oxidative balance in the parasite. Depletion of TgIF2K-B alters gene expression, leading to accelerated growth and a diminished ability to convert into tissue cysts. This study establishes that TgIF2K-B is essential for the parasite's oxidative stress response and its ability to persist in the host as a latent infection.

Topics & Concepts

Toxoplasma gondiiClearanceBiologyImmune systemPathogenicityOxidative stressPopulationVirologyMicrobiologyParasite hostingImmunologyAntibodyMedicineBiochemistryWorld Wide WebUrologyEnvironmental healthComputer scienceToxoplasma gondii Research StudiesCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus researchinterferon and immune responses