4.7 Article

Phosphatidic Acid-Mediated Signaling Regulates Microneme Secretion in Toxoplasma

Journal

CELL HOST & MICROBE
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 349-360

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2016.02.006

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Foundation [FN3100A0-116722]
  2. US NIH [AI46675]
  3. Indo-Swiss joint research project [ISJRP-138850]
  4. Agence Nationale de la recherche (ANR)
  5. Parafrap labex Atip-Avenir
  6. FINOVI
  7. Agir-Universite Joseph Fourier (Project Apicolipid)

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The obligate intracellular lifestyle of apicomplexan parasites necessitates an invasive phase underpinned by timely and spatially controlled secretion of apical organelles termed micronemes. In Toxoplasma gondii, extracellular potassium levels and other stimuli trigger a signaling cascade culminating in phosphoinositide-phospholipase C (PLC) activation, which generates the secondmessengers diacylglycerol (DAG) and IP3 and ultimately results in microneme secretion. Here we show that a delicate balance between DAG and its downstream product, phosphatidic acid (PA), is essential for controlling microneme release. Governing this balance is the apicomplexan-specific DAG-kinase-1, which interconverts PA and DAG, and whose depletion impairs egress and causes parasite death. Additionally, we identify an acylated pleckstrin-homology (PH) domain-containing protein (APH) on the microneme surface that senses PA during microneme secretion and is necessary for microneme exocytosis. As APH is conserved in Apicomplexa, these findings highlight a potentially widely used mechanism in which key lipid mediators regulate microneme exocytosis.

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