Abstract

BackgroundToxoplasma gondii gives rise to toxoplasmosis, among the most prevalent parasitic diseases of animals and man. Transformation of the tachzyoite stage into the latent bradyzoite-cyst form underlies chronic disease and leads to a lifetime risk of recrudescence in individuals whose immune system becomes compromised. Given the importance of tissue cyst formation, there has been intensive focus on the development of methods to study bradyzoite differentiation, although the molecular basis for the developmental switch is still largely unknown.ResultsWe have used serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) to define the Toxoplasma gondii transcriptome of the intermediate-host life cycle that leads to the formation of the bradyzoite/tissue cyst. A broad view of gene expression is provided by >4-fold coverage from nine distinct libraries (~300,000 SAGE tags) representing key developmental transitions in primary parasite populations and in laboratory strains representing the three canonical genotypes. SAGE tags, and their corresponding mRNAs, were analyzed with respect to abundance, uniqueness, and antisense/sense polarity and chromosome distribution and developmental specificity.ConclusionThis study demonstrates that phenotypic transitions during parasite development were marked by unique stage-specific mRNAs that accounted for 18% of the total SAGE tags and varied from 1–5% of the tags in each developmental stage. We have also found that Toxoplasma mRNA pools have a unique parasite-specific composition with 1 in 5 transcripts encoding Apicomplexa-specific genes functioning in parasite invasion and transmission. Developmentally co-regulated genes were dispersed across all Toxoplasma chromosomes, as were tags representing each abundance class, and a variety of biochemical pathways indicating that trans-acting mechanisms likely control gene expression in this parasite. We observed distinct similarities in the specificity and expression levels of mRNAs in primary populations (Day-6 post-sporozoite infection) that occur prior to the onset of bradyzoite development that were uniquely shared with the virulent Type I-RH laboratory strain suggesting that development of RH may be arrested. By contrast, strains from Type II-Me49B7 and Type III-VEGmsj contain SAGE tags corresponding to bradyzoite genes, which suggests that priming of developmental expression likely plays a role in the greater capacity of these strains to complete bradyzoite development.

Highlights

  • Toxoplasma gondii gives rise to toxoplasmosis, among the most prevalent parasitic diseases of animals and man

  • Whole cell analysis of gene expression in the protozoan, Toxoplasma gondii We have previously reported that the sporozoite or bradyzoite stages traverse several growth transitions that are accompanied by specific alterations in gene expression leading to bradyzoite development [13,14,26]

  • This report describes the first large-scale investigation of the Toxoplasma transcriptome during development in the intermediate life cycle. This comprehensive serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) database offers a broad view of gene expression in primary as well as laboratory adapted parasite populations and defines fundamental changes in mRNA pools that will serve as a comparative base for future functional genomic studies

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Summary

Introduction

Toxoplasma gondii gives rise to toxoplasmosis, among the most prevalent parasitic diseases of animals and man. While T. gondii completes the definitive life cycle in a single animal host (feline), the capacity of oocysts (shed from the feline host) as well as tissue cysts to infect multiple hosts has enabled T. gondii to increase the host range for the intermediate life cycle. This rare modification to the heteroxenous (two host) life cycle is thought to have occurred relatively recently and may be responsible for the expansion of this parasite to nearly every continent [1]. Oocyst and tissue cyst sources contribute to rates of human exposure such that the risk of infection in the U.S is one in three by age 50 (25% for >20 yrs of age [9]; and nearly 100% by the end of childhood in other parts of the world [10])

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