Abstract

Trypanosoma cruzi parasites causing Chagas disease are passed between mammals by the triatomine bug vector. Within the insect, T.cruzi epimastigote-stage cells replicate and progress through the increasingly nutrient-restricted digestive tract, differentiating into infectious, nonreplicative metacyclic trypomastigotes. Thus, we evaluated how nutrient perturbations or metacyclogenesis affects mitochondrial gene expression in different insect life cycle stages. We compared mitochondrial RNA abundances in cultures containing fed, replicating epimastigotes, differentiating cultures containing both starved epimastigotes and metacyclic trypomastigotes and epimastigote starvation cultures. We observed increases in mitochondrial rRNAs and some mRNAs in differentiating cultures. These increases predominated only for the edited CYb mRNA in cultures enriched for metacyclic trypomastigotes. For the other transcripts, abundance increases were linked to starvation and were strongest in culture fractions with a high population of starved epimastigotes. We show that loss of both glucose and amino acids results in rapid increases in RNA abundances that are quickly reduced when these nutrients are returned. Furthermore, the individual RNAs exhibit distinct temporal abundance patterns, suggestive of multiple mechanisms regulating individual transcript abundance. Finally, increases in mitochondrial respiratory complex subunit mRNA abundances were not matched by increases in abundances of nucleus-encoded subunit mRNAs, nor were there statistically significant increases in protein levels of three nucleus-encoded subunits tested. These results show that, similarly to that in T.brucei, the mitochondrial genome in T.cruzi has the potential to alter gene expression in response to environmental or developmental stimuli but for an as-yet-unknown purpose. IMPORTANCE Chagas disease is caused by insect-transmitted Trypanosoma cruzi. Halting T.cruzi's life cycle in one of its various human and insect life stages would effectively stop the parasite's infection cycle. T.cruzi is exposed to a variety of environmental conditions in its different life stages, and gene expression must be remodeled to survive these changes. In this work, we look at the impact that one of these changes, nutrient depletion, has on the expression of the 20 gene products encoded in the mitochondrial genome that is neglected by whole-genome studies. We show increases in mitochondrial RNA abundances in starved insect-stage cells, under two conditions in which transition to the infectious stage occurs or does not. This report is the first to show that T.cruzi mitochondrial gene expression is sensitive to environmental perturbations, consistent with mitochondrial gene expression regulatory pathways being potential antiparasitic targets.

Highlights

  • Trypanosoma cruzi parasites causing Chagas disease are passed between mammals by the triatomine bug vector

  • Epimastigotes were obtained from culture in liver infusion tryptose (LIT) medium [42] containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS)

  • This work is an initial foray into revealing T. cruzi mitochondrial gene expression and its regulation

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Summary

Introduction

Trypanosoma cruzi parasites causing Chagas disease are passed between mammals by the triatomine bug vector. Increases in mitochondrial respiratory complex subunit mRNA abundances were not matched by increases in abundances of nucleus-encoded subunit mRNAs, nor were there statistically significant increases in protein levels of three nucleusencoded subunits tested These results show that, to that in T. brucei, the mitochondrial genome in T. cruzi has the potential to alter gene expression in response to environmental or developmental stimuli but for an as-yet-unknown purpose. The environmental and functional demands of their various life cycle stages, as they are transmitted from insect vectors to humans and livestock, require major developmental remodeling of gene expression. Myriad studies have addressed changes in trypanosome gene expression by examining mRNA abundance, protein abundance, and translational efficiency between life stages or upon exposure to environmental stimuli [2, 3]. A prominent and unique feature of trypanosome mitochondrial RNA processing is uridine insertion/deletion RNA editing, which results in mature translatable mRNAs [28]

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