Adhesion of Crithidia fasciculata promotes a rapid change in developmental fate driven by cAMP signaling
Trypanosomatids are single-celled parasites responsible for human and animal disease. Typically, colonization of an insect host is required for transmission. Stable attachment of parasites to insect tissues their single flagellum coincides with differentiation and morphological changes. Although att...
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Veröffentlicht in: | mSphere 2024-10, Vol.9 (10), p.e0061724 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Trypanosomatids are single-celled parasites responsible for human and animal disease. Typically, colonization of an insect host is required for transmission. Stable attachment of parasites to insect tissues
their single flagellum coincides with differentiation and morphological changes. Although attachment is a conserved stage in trypanosomatid life cycles, the molecular mechanisms are not well understood. To study this process, we elaborate upon an
model in which the swimming form of the trypanosomatid
rapidly differentiates following adhesion to artificial substrates. Live imaging of cells transitioning from swimming to attached shows parasites undergoing a defined sequence of events, including an initial adhesion near the base of the flagellum immediately followed by flagellar shortening, cell rounding, and the formation of a hemidesmosome-like attachment plaque between the tip of the shortened flagellum and the substrate. Quantitative proteomics of swimming versus attached parasites suggests differential regulation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-based signaling proteins. We have localized two of these proteins to the flagellum of swimming
; however, both are absent from the shortened flagellum of attached cells. Pharmacological inhibition of cAMP phosphodiesterases increased cAMP levels in the cell and prevented attachment. Further, treatment with inhibitor did not affect the growth rate of either swimming or established attached cells, indicating that its effect is limited to a critical window during the early stages of adhesion. These data suggest that cAMP signaling is required for attachment of
and that flagellar signaling domains may be reorganized during differentiation and attachment.IMPORTANCETrypanosomatid parasites cause significant disease burden worldwide and require insect vectors for transmission. In the insect, parasites attach to tissues, sometimes dividing as attached cells or producing motile, infectious forms. The significance and cellular mechanisms of attachment are relatively unexplored. Here, we exploit a model trypanosomatid that attaches robustly to artificial surfaces to better understand this process. This attachment recapitulates that observed
and can be used to define the stages and morphological features of attachment as well as conditions that impact attachment efficiency. We have identified proteins that are enriched in either swimming or attached parasites, supporting a role for the cyclic AMP signaling pathwa |
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ISSN: | 2379-5042 2379-5042 |
DOI: | 10.1128/msphere.00617-24 |