Toxoplasma induced cytokine release syndrome is critically dependent on the expression of pore-forming Perforin-Like Protein-1
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Acute virulence in Toxoplasma gondii is linked to an excessive proinflammatory cytokine cascade during laboratory murine infection. Previous work showed that T. gondii secretes a pore forming protein, PLP1, that is required for efficient cytolytic egress from host cells. Deletion of the PLP1 gene results in defective egress from infected culture cells and a marked reduction in parasite virulence. The goal of the present study was to gain insight into the nature of the attenuated virulence observed in PLP1 knockout compared to wild type (WT) RH parasites. Using in vivo bioluminescence imaging, we show that parasites lacking PLP1 establish an acute infection and disseminate throughout the infected mice. Histological tissue analysis indicates that parasites cause severe pathology, even in the absence of PLP1. However, mice infected with Δplp1 parasites evoke a protective inflammatory response, demonstrated by mouse survival and control of infection. Flow cytometric analysis was used to determine cellular changes occurring during both WT and Δ plp1 parasite infection. Parasite control in the Δplp1 infection was associated with earlier activation of myeloid cells and a moderate neutrophil response that, by comparison, becomes the dominant infiltrating cell type of WT infection. Positive disease outcome during Δplp1 parasite infection is also associated with regulated induction of proinflammatory cytokines, including IFN-γ and TNF-α, and an earlier IL-10 regulatory response that is dysregulated during WT infection. Together these findings suggest a key role for Toxoplasma PLP1 in promoting a lethal inflammatory immune response during acute infection with a virulent strain of the parasite.
Author Summary
Pore-forming proteins are virulence determinants expressed by multiple different pathogens, with varied roles including cellular invasion and escape, immune cell destruction, and the hijack of host cell defenses. The pathogen, Toxoplasma gondii , expresses a pore-forming protein PLP1, that is required for cell lysis and acute virulence in mice. Here, we investigate the potential mechanisms by which this pore-forming protein promotes parasite virulence; from parasite replication and dissemination to immunologic outcomes after infection. In vivo infections demonstrate that parasites replicate, disseminate, and stimulate a protective immune response when PLP1 is not expressed. We show that PLP1 expression induces a parasite driven dysregulation of cell populations and cytokine/chemokine responses, resulting in cytokine release syndrome. In a broader context, Toxoplasma’s PLP1 is comparable to other pathogen pore-forming proteins that function as virulence determinants by their ability to alter host immune responses.