Affiliation:
1. Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5120
2. Department of Microbiology & Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5124
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Toxoplasma gondii
is a haploid protozoan parasite infecting about one in seven people in the United States. Key to the worldwide prevalence of
T. gondii
is its ability to establish a lifelong, chronic infection by evading the immune system, and central to this is the developmental switch between the two asexual forms, tachyzoites and bradyzoites. A library of mutants defective in tachyzoite-to-bradyzoite differentiation (Tbd
−
) was created through insertional mutagenesis. This library contains mutants that, compared to the wild type, are between 20% and 74% as efficient at stage conversion. Two mutants, TBD5 and TBD8, with disruptions in a gene encoding a putative pseudouridine synthase, PUS1, were identified. The disruption in TBD8 is in the 5′ end of the
PUS1
gene and appears to produce a null allele with a 50% defect in differentiation. This is about the same switch efficiency as obtained with an engineered
pus1
deletion mutant (Δ
pus1
). The insertion in TBD5 is within the
PUS1
coding region, and this appears to result in a more extreme phenotype of only ∼10% switch efficiency. Complementation of TBD8 with the genomic
PUS1
allele restored wild-type differentiation efficiency. Infection of mice with
pus1
mutant strains results in increased mortality during the acute phase and higher cyst burdens during the chronic infection, demonstrating an aberrant differentiation phenotype in vivo due to
PUS1
disruption. Our results suggest a surprising and important role for RNA modification in this biological process.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
34 articles.
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