4.5 Article

Molecular chaperone function of stress inducible Hsp70 is critical for intracellular multiplication of Toxoplasma gondii

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2020.118898

Keywords

Toxoplasma gondii; Molecular chaperone Hsp70; Co-chaperone; Autophagy; Lysosome; Pifithrin

Funding

  1. Dept. of Science and Technology, INSPIRE grant [04/2016/000488, IFA16-LSBM-174]
  2. SERB ECRA [ECRA/2018/1640]
  3. SERB [ECR/2017/002023]
  4. INSPIRE grant [IFA16LSBM-170]

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Intracellular pathogens like Toxoplasma gondii manipulate host cell survival and stress response by targeting molecular chaperones such as Heat shock proteins (Hsps), particularly Hsp70. This study demonstrates that the selective inhibitor PES disrupts Hsp70 function, leading to dysregulation of host autophagy and attenuation of T. gondii multiplication. Interestingly, PES targets not only host Hsp70 but also the parasite's Hsp70 homologue, highlighting the potential of dual targeting for therapeutic interventions.
Intracellular pathogens like Toxoplasma gondii often target proteins and pathways critical for host cell survival and stress response. Molecular chaperones encoded by the evolutionary conserved Heat shock proteins (Hsps) maintain proteostasis and are vital to cell survival following exposure to any form of stress. A key protein of this family is Hsp70, an ATP-driven molecular chaperone, which is stress inducible and often indiscernible in normal cells. Role of this protein with respect to intracellular survival and multiplication of protozoan parasite like T. gondii remains to be examined. We find that T. gondii infection upregulates expression of host Hsp70. Hsp70 selective inhibitor 2-phenylethynesulfonamide (PES) attenuates intracellular T. gondii multiplication. Biotinylated PES confirms selective interaction of this small molecule inhibitor with Hsp70. We show that PES acts by disrupting Hsp70 chaperone function which leads to dysregulation of host autophagy. Silencing of host Hsp70 underscores its importance for intracellular multiplication of T. gondii, however, attenuation achieved using PES is not completely attributable to host Hsp70 indicating the presence of other intracellular targets of PES in infected host cells. We find that PES is also able to target T. gondii Hsp70 homologue which was shown using PES binding assay. Detailed molecular docking analysis substantiates PES targeting of TgHsp70 in addition to host Hsp70. While establishing the importance of protein quality control in infection, this study brings to the fore a unique opportunity of dual targeting of host and parasite Hsp70 demonstrating how structural conservation of these proteins may be exploited for therapeutic design.

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