4.8 Article

Crosstalk between PKA and PKG controls pH-dependent host cell egress of Toxoplasma gondii

期刊

EMBO JOURNAL
卷 36, 期 21, 页码 3250-3267

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.201796794

关键词

acylation; cAMP-dependent protein kinase A; cGMP-dependent protein kinase G; egress; Toxoplasma gondii

资金

  1. Swiss National Foundation [FN310030B_166678, BSSGI0_155852]
  2. Swiss Government Excellence Scholarship
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [BSSGI0_155852] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Toxoplasma gondii encodes three protein kinase A catalytic (PKAc1-3) and one regulatory (PKAr) subunits to integrate cAMP-dependent signals. Here, we show that inactive PKAc1 is maintained at the parasite pellicle by interacting with acylated PKAr1 Either a conditional knockdown of PKAr or the overexpression of PKAc1 blocks parasite division. Conversely, down-regulation of PKAc1 or stabilisation of a dominant-negative PKAr isoform that does not bind cAMP triggers premature parasite egress from infected cells followed by serial invasion attempts leading to host cell lysis. This untimely egress depends on host cell acidification. A phosphoproteome analysis suggested the interplay between cAMP and cGMP signalling as PKAc1 inactivation changes the phosphorylation profile of a putative cGMP-phosphodiesterase. Concordantly, inhibition of the cGMP-dependent protein kinase G (PKG) blocks egress induced by PKAc1 inactivation or environmental acidification, while a cGMP-phosphodiesterase inhibitor circumvents egress repression by PKAc1 or pH neutralisation. This indicates that pH and PKAc1 act as balancing regulators of cGMP metabolism to control egress. These results reveal a crosstalk between PKA and PKG pathways to govern egress in T. gondii.

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