Author:
Ayllón Nieves,Villar Margarita,Busby Ann T.,Kocan Katherine M.,Blouin Edmour F.,Bonzón-Kulichenko Elena,Galindo Ruth C.,Mangold Atilio J.,Alberdi Pilar,Pérez de la Lastra José M.,Vázquez Jesús,de la Fuente José
Abstract
ABSTRACTAnaplasma phagocytophilumcauses human granulocytic anaplasmosis. Infection with this zoonotic pathogen affects gene expression in both the vertebrate host and the tick vector,Ixodes scapularis. Here, we identified new genes, including spectrin alpha chain or alpha-fodrin (CG8) and voltage-dependent anion-selective channel or mitochondrial porin (T2), that are involved inA. phagocytophiluminfection/multiplication and the tick cell response to infection. The pathogen downregulated the expression of CG8 in tick salivary glands and T2 in both the gut and salivary glands to inhibit apoptosis as a mechanism to subvert host cell defenses and increase infection. In the gut, the tick response to infection through CG8 upregulation was used by the pathogen to increase infection due to the cytoskeleton rearrangement that is required for pathogen infection. These results increase our understanding of the role of tick genes duringA. phagocytophiluminfection and multiplication and demonstrate that the pathogen uses similar strategies to establish infection in both vertebrate and invertebrate hosts.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
61 articles.
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