Abstract

Chagas disease is responsible for more than 10,000 deaths per year and about 6 to 7 million infected people worldwide. In its chronic stage, patients can develop mega-colon, mega-esophagus, and cardiomyopathy. Differences in clinical outcomes may be determined, in part, by the genetic background of the parasite that causes Chagas disease. Trypanosoma cruzi has a high genetic diversity, and each group of strains may elicit specific pathological responses in the host. Conflicting results have been reported in studies using various combinations of mammalian host—T. cruzi strains. We previously profiled the transcriptomic signatures resulting from infection of L6E9 rat myoblasts with four reference strains of T. cruzi (Brazil, CL, Y, and Tulahuen). The four strains induced similar overall gene expression alterations in the myoblasts, although only 21 genes were equally affected by all strains. Cardiotrophin-like cytokine factor 1 (Clcf1) was one of the genes found to be consistently upregulated by the infection with all four strains of T. cruzi. This cytokine is a member of the interleukin-6 family that binds to glycoprotein 130 receptor and activates the JAK/STAT signaling pathway, which may lead to muscle cell hypertrophy. Another commonly upregulated gene was tyrosine 3-monooxygenase/tryptophan 5-monooxygenase activation protein theta (Ywhaq, 14-3-3 protein Θ), present in the Cell Cycle Pathway. In the present work, we reanalyzed our previous microarray dataset, aiming at understanding in more details the transcriptomic impact that each strain has on JAK/STAT signaling and Cell Cycle pathways. Using Pearson correlation analysis between the expression levels of gene pairs in biological replicas from each pathway, we determined the coordination between such pairs in each experimental condition and the predicted protein interactions between the significantly altered genes by each strain. We found that although these highlighted genes were similarly affected by all four strains, the downstream genes or their interaction partners were not necessarily equally affected, thus reinforcing the idea of the role of parasite background on host cell transcriptome. These new analyses provide further evidence to the mechanistic understanding of how distinct T. cruzi strains lead to diverse remodeling of host cell transcriptome.

Highlights

  • Chagas disease (CD) is caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi and affects about 6 to 7 million people worldwide (WHO, 2019)

  • To illustrate the effect that T. cruzi infection had on coordination between members of the Janus kinase (JAK)/signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) pathway, we show in Figure 5C the coordination profile between STAT3 and caveolin-1

  • T. cruzi genetic isolates are currently divided into six discrete typing units (DTUs) according to genetic, biochemical, and/or biological markers (Zingales et al, 2009); and strains from TcII, TcV, or TcVI were associated with chronic infection (Zingales, 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Chagas disease (CD) is caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi and affects about 6 to 7 million people worldwide (WHO, 2019). The cardiac form of CD (Mukherjee et al, 2003; Goldenberg et al, 2009; Soares et al, 2010; Adesse et al, 2011) is the main clinical manifestation, which can be observed in more than 30% of chronically infected people, whereas another 10% develop digestive, neurological, or mixed alterations (Rassi et al, 2010, 2012; WHO, 2019) These diverse presentations might in part be explained by genetic differences between strains of T. cruzi, which have been classified into six discrete typing units (DTUs) (Andrade and Magalhaes, 1997; Zingales et al, 2009). In acute experimental CD, rats infected with T. cruzi (Sylvio X10/7 strain, TcI) revealed cardiac overexpression of CLCF1 and gp130 (Chandrasekar et al, 1998) These data could explain in part why the predominant DTUs in our previous study (TcI and TcII) are associated with cardiac manifestation of CD

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