4.7 Article

Mitochondrion-Dependent Apoptosis Is Essential for Rickettsia parkeri Infection and Replication in Vector Cells

期刊

MSYSTEMS
卷 6, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.01209-20

关键词

tick; apoptosis; mitochondria; Rickettsia pathogenesis; tick-borne pathogens; Rickettsia

资金

  1. NIH [2R01AI049424]
  2. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station [MIN-17-078]

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This study reveals that apoptosis plays a crucial role in rickettsial infection and replication in tick cells, with no direct correlation between apoptosis activation and rickettsial pathogenicity in vector cells. These findings provide insights into the mechanisms of how apoptosis facilitates rickettsial infection in arthropod vectors, contributing to the potential discovery of targets for new vaccines and drugs against rickettsial infections.
Apoptosis is an innate immune response induced by infection in eukar-yotes that contributes significantly to protection from pathogens. However, little is known about the role of apoptosis in the interactions of arthropod vectors with the rickettsiae that they transmit. Rickettsia spp. are vector-borne obligately intracellular bacteria and display different degrees of virulence in their eukaryotic hosts. In this study, we found that infection with Rickettsia parkeri (Rp) activated the apoptosis pathway in an Amblyomma americanum tick cell line (AAE2), as evidenced by the loss of phospholipid membrane asymmetry and DNA fragmentations. Additionally, infection with Rp also led to apoptosis activation in cell lines of different tick species. Interestingly, suppressing apoptosis decreased Rp infection and replication, while the activation of apoptosis increased Rp accumulation at the early stage of infection. Moreover, mitochondrion-dependent apoptosis was essential for Rp infection and replication in vector cells, and apoptosis induction required intracellular rickettsia replication. We further showed that Rp utilizes two different survival strategies to modulate apoptosis in the arthropod vectors and mammalian host cells. There was no direct correlation between apoptosis activation in vector cells and rickettsial path-ogenicity. These novel findings indicate a possible mechanism whereby apoptosis facilitates infection and replication of a Rickettsia sp. in an arthropod vector. These results contribute to our understanding of how the vector's responses to pathogen infection affect pathogen replication and therefore transmission. IMPORTANCE Rickettsioses, infections caused by the genus Rickettsia, are among the oldest known infectious diseases. Ticks are essential arthropod vectors for rickettsiae, and knowledge about the interactions between ticks, their hosts, and pathogens is fundamental for identifying drivers of tick-borne rickettsioses. Despite the rapid de-velopment in apoptosis research with rickettsiae, little is known regarding the role of apoptosis in the interactions between Rickettsia spp., vertebrate hosts, and arthropod vectors. Here, we demonstrated that mitochondrion-dependent apoptosis is essential for rickettsial infection and replication in vector cells and that apoptosis induction requires intracellular rickettsial replication. However, rickettsial pathogenicity is not linked with apoptosis activation in tick cells. Our findings improve understanding of the apoptosis mechanism in arthropods exploited by rickettsiae and also the poten-tial to discover specific targets for new vaccines and drugs to prevent or treat rick-ettsial infections.

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