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Secreted Effectors Modulating Immune Responses to Toxoplasma gondii

期刊

LIFE-BASEL
卷 11, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life11090988

关键词

Toxoplasma gondii; secreted effector; innate immunity; dense granule proteins; immune modulation

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1-AI134753, T32-AI070117]

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Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that chronically infects a third of humans. Recent advancements in T. gondii research have revealed a plethora of parasite-secreted proteins that suppress as well as activate immune responses. The parasite has developed various mechanisms to suppress host immune responses and ensure its own survival and transmission.
Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that chronically infects a third of humans. It can cause life-threatening encephalitis in immune-compromised individuals. Congenital infection also results in blindness and intellectual disabilities. In the intracellular milieu, parasites encounter various immunological effectors that have been shaped to limit parasite infection. Parasites not only have to suppress these anti-parasitic inflammatory responses but also ensure the host organism's survival until their subsequent transmission. Recent advancements in T. gondii research have revealed a plethora of parasite-secreted proteins that suppress as well as activate immune responses. This mini-review will comprehensively examine each secreted immunomodulatory effector based on the location of their actions. The first section is focused on secreted effectors that localize to the parasitophorous vacuole membrane, the interface between the parasites and the host cytoplasm. Murine hosts are equipped with potent IFN gamma-induced immune-related GTPases, and various parasite effectors subvert these to prevent parasite elimination. The second section examines several cytoplasmic and ER effectors, including a recently described function for matrix antigen 1 (MAG1) as a secreted effector. The third section covers the repertoire of nuclear effectors that hijack transcription factors and epigenetic repressors that alter gene expression. The last section focuses on the translocation of dense-granule effectors and effectors in the setting of T. gondii tissue cysts (the bradyzoite parasitophorous vacuole).

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