Abstract

The obligate intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii secretes effector molecules into the host cell to modulate host immunity. Previous studies have shown that T. gondii could interfere with host NF-κB signaling to promote their survival, but the effectors of type I strains remain unclear. The polymorphic rhoptry protein ROP18 is a key serine/threonine kinase that phosphorylates host proteins to modulate acute virulence. Our data demonstrated that the N-terminal portion of ROP18 is associated with the dimerization domain of p65. ROP18 phosphorylates p65 at Ser-468 and targets this protein to the ubiquitin-dependent degradation pathway. The kinase activity of ROP18 is required for p65 degradation and suppresses NF-κB activation. Consistently, compared with wild-type ROP18 strain, ROP18 kinase-deficient type I parasites displayed a severe inability to inhibit NF-κB, culminating in the enhanced production of IL-6, IL-12, and TNF-α in infected macrophages. In addition, studies have shown that transgenic parasites carrying kinase-deficient ROP18 induce M1-biased activation. These results demonstrate for the first time that the virulence factor ROP18 in T. gondii type I strains is responsible for inhibiting the host NF-κB pathway and for suppressing proinflammatory cytokine expression, thus providing a survival advantage to the infectious agent.

Highlights

  • ROP18 is a Toxoplasma secreted Ser/Thr protein kinase important for acute virulence

  • These results demonstrate for the first time that the virulence factor ROP18 in T. gondii type I strains is responsible for inhibiting the host NF-␬B pathway and for suppressing proinflammatory cytokine expression, providing a survival advantage to the infectious agent

  • Identification of p65 as a ROP18-interacting Host Protein— To identify host proteins targeted by the virulence factor ROP18, we performed a systematic yeast two-hybrid screening in which the cDNA fragment harboring the N-terminal portion of ROP18 was used as bait

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Summary

Background

ROP18 is a Toxoplasma secreted Ser/Thr protein kinase important for acute virulence. Results: ROP18 phosphorylates host p65 at Ser-468 and target this protein to the ubiquitin-dependent degradation. Studies have shown that transgenic parasites carrying kinase-deficient ROP18 induce M1-biased activation These results demonstrate for the first time that the virulence factor ROP18 in T. gondii type I strains is responsible for inhibiting the host NF-␬B pathway and for suppressing proinflammatory cytokine expression, providing a survival advantage to the infectious agent. Some studies have shown that type I strains inhibit NF-␬B pathway and the recruitment and activation of immune cells, resulting in the enhanced survival of the parasites (10 – 14). These studies showed that infection of mammalian cells with the type I strain results in the activation of I␬B kinase and

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