4.4 Article

TcI Isolates of Trypanosoma cruzi Exploit the Antioxidant Network for Enhanced Intracellular Survival in Macrophages and Virulence in Mice

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 84, Issue 6, Pages 1842-1856

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00193-16

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [2R01AI0545780]
  2. Institute for Human Infections and Immunity (IHII), UTMB, Galveston
  3. CONICET [PIP 2010-2012 11420090100297]
  4. Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute Young Clinical Scientist Award [123385]
  5. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion e Innovacion (Uruguay) [DCI-ALA/2011/023-502]
  6. CONICET
  7. UTMB McLaughlin Endowment, IHII

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Trypanosoma cruzi species is categorized into six discrete typing units (TcI to TcVI) of which TcI is most abundantly noted in the sylvatic transmission cycle and considered the major cause of human disease. In our study, the TcI strains Colombiana (COL), SylvioX10/4 (SYL), and a cultured clone (TCC) exhibited different biological behavior in a murine model, ranging from high parasitemia and symptomatic cardiomyopathy (SYL), mild parasitemia and high tissue tropism (COL), to no pathogenicity (TCC). Proteomic profiling of the insect (epimastigote) and infective (trypomastigote) forms by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis/matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry, followed by functional annotation of the differential proteome data sets (>= 2-fold change, P<0.05), showed that several proteins involved in (i) cytoskeletal assembly and remodeling, essential for flagellar wave frequency and amplitude and forward motility of the parasite, and (ii) the parasite-specific antioxidant network were enhanced in COL and SYL (versus TCC) trypomastigotes. Western blotting confirmed the enhanced protein levels of cytosolic and mitochondrial tryparedoxin peroxidases and their substrate (tryparedoxin) and iron superoxide dismutase in COL and SYL (versus TCC) trypomastigotes. Further, COL and SYL (but not TCC) were resistant to exogenous treatment with stable oxidants (H2O2 and peroxynitrite [ONOO-]) and dampened the intracellular superoxide and nitric oxide response in macrophages, and thus these isolates escaped from macrophages. Our findings suggest that protein expression conducive to increase in motility and control of macrophage-derived free radicals provides survival and persistence benefits to TcI isolates of T. cruzi.

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