Parasite vaccine
11779639 · 2023-10-10
Assignee
- The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (Melbourne, AU)
- The University Of Melbourne (Melbourne, AU)
Inventors
- Chris Tonkin (Melbourne, AU)
- Alessandro Uboldi (Melbourne, AU)
- Malcolm McConville (Melbourne, AU)
- Martin Blume (Melbourne, AU)
Cpc classification
C12N9/1205
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Y204/01015
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Y207/11001
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61P33/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C12N9/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
A61P33/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C12N9/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present disclosure provides mutant parasites, in particular protozoan parasites comprising a mutation of the trehalose-6-phosphate synthase/6-phosphate phosphatase (TPS/TPP)-like gene of Toxoplasma gondii (herein referred to as ‘Toxoplasma’) or a homologue thereof as well as vaccines comprising same.
Claims
1. An isolated mutant protozoan Toxoplasma gondii parasite wherein the mutant parasite is attenuated when grown or cultured in glucose-containing medium but not attenuated when grown or cultured in glucose-free medium and wherein said attenuation results from the uncontrolled accumulation of starch-like amylopectin stores when grown in glucose-containing medium, wherein the mutant parasite comprises an inactivating mutation of the trehalose-6-phosphate synthase/trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase (TPS/TPP)-like gene of Toxoplasma (ΔTPS/TPP) comprising a sequence SEQ ID NO:1 or SEQ ID NO:3.
2. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the inactivating mutation is caused by a targeted or non-targeted disruption of SEQ ID NO:1 or SEQ ID NO:3.
3. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the inactivating mutation is caused by a targeted or non-targeted disruption in a coding sequence and/or a non-coding sequence and/or a regulatory sequence controlling gene transcription of SEQ ID NO:1 or SEQ ID NO:3.
4. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the inactivating mutation is a frame shift mutation in the coding sequence of SEQ ID NO:1 or SEQ ID NO:3.
5. The mutant parasite according to claim 2, wherein targeted disruption of the TPS/TPP-like gene comprises an insertion of one or more contiguous heterologous nucleotides or a deletion of one or more contiguous nucleotides in SEQ ID NO:1 or SEQ ID NO:3.
6. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the native TPS/TPP-like gene consists of the sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1.
7. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the native TPS/TPP-like gene consists of the sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:3.
8. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the parasite comprises an inactivation of the CDPK2 gene of Toxoplasma or a C-terminal modified hexokinase (HxK) gene in combination with the inactivated or disrupted TPS/TPP-like gene, wherein starch accumulation is increased relative to wild-type non-mutated parasites.
9. The mutant parasite according to claim 8, further comprising an inactivation of the CDPK2 gene of Toxoplasma.
10. The mutant parasite according to claim 8, further comprising a C-terminal modified hexokinase (HxK) gene.
11. The mutant parasite according to claim 1, wherein the mutant is selected from one of the following: (i) a Toxoplasma gondii mutant deposited with the ATCC and designated PTA-125166; (ii) a Toxoplasma gondii mutant deposited with the ATCC and designated PTA-125164; and (iii) Toxoplasma gondii mutant deposited with the ATCC and designated PTA-125165.
12. A vaccine comprising an isolated mutant protozoan Toxoplasma gondii parasite of claim 1.
13. The vaccine according to claim 12, wherein the parasite comprises an inactivating mutation of SEQ ID NO:1.
14. The vaccine according to claim 12, further comprising a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or excipient.
15. The vaccine according to claim 12, wherein oocyst shedding is substantially reduced or prevented in a human or non-human animal vaccinated with the vaccine.
16. A method of vaccinating an animal against a Toxoplasma parasite or against a Toxoplasma parasitic infection or condition without concomitant oocyst shedding, comprising administering to the animal a mutant Toxoplasma gondii parasite according to claim 1.
17. A method for vaccinating an animal against a Toxoplasma parasite or against a Toxoplasma parasitic infection or condition without concomitant oocyst shedding, comprising administering to the animal the vaccine according to claim 12.
18. A method for vaccinating an animal against toxoplasmosis without concomitant oocyst shedding or of preventing toxoplasmosis in an animal, comprising administering to the animal a mutant Toxoplasma gondii parasite according to claim 1.
19. The vaccine according to claim 12, wherein the vaccine comprises mutant Toxoplasma tachyzoites, bradyzoites or oocysts.
20. A method for vaccinating an animal against toxoplasmosis without concomitant oocyst shedding or of preventing toxoplasmosis in an animal, the method comprising administering to the animal the vaccine according to claim 13.
21. The vaccine according to claim 12, wherein the parasite comprises an inactivating mutation of SEQ ID NO:3.
22. A method for vaccinating an animal against toxoplasmosis without concomitant oocyst shedding or of preventing toxoplasmosis in an animal, the method comprising administering to the animal the vaccine according to claim 21.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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KEY TO SEQUENCE LISTING
(17) SEQ ID NO:1: shows the genomic sequence of the TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii.
(18) SEQ ID NO:2: shows the N-terminal sequence of the TPS/TPP-like gene (first 200 nucleotides).
(19) SEQ ID NO:3: shows the cDNA sequence of the TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii.
(20) SEQ ID NO:4: sequence of a N-terminal portion of the wild-type TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii targeted for CRISPR including the 20 bp WT protospacer sequence and PAM motif.
(21) SEQ ID NO:5: shows a sequence of a portion of the mutated TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii containing a single C insertion at residue 18 (
(22) SEQ ID NO:6: shows a sequence of a portion of the mutated TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii containing an insertion of heterologous nucleotides following residue 15 (
(23) SEQ ID NO:7: shows a sequence of a portion of the mutated TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii containing a deletion of a single T nucleotide (3D).
(24) SEQ ID NO:8: shows a sequence of a portion of the mutated TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii containing an insertion of greater than 1000 nucleotides following residue 20 (
(25) SEQ ID NO:9: shows a sequence of a portion of the mutated TPS/TPP-like gene from T. gondii which has a 58 bp deletion including the entire protospacer sequence and PAM motif (
(26) SEQ ID NO:10: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(27) SEQ ID NO:11: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(28) SEQ ID NO:12: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(29) SEQ ID NO:13: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(30) SEQ ID NO:14: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(31) SEQ ID NO:15: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(32) SEQ ID NO:16: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(33) SEQ ID NO:17: shows the sequence of an oligonucleotide primer.
(34) SEQ ID NO:18: shows the sequence of a mutant comprising a 183 bp insertion sequence within SEQ ID NO:4.
(35) SEQ ID NO:19: shows the sequence of a mutant comprising a>1 kb insertion sequence (partial sequence obtained) disrupting the TPS/TPP locus in SEQ ID NO:8.
(36) SEQ ID NO:20: shows the sequence of the HA-tagged hexokinase modified C-terminus.
(37) SEQ ID NO:21: shows the the 58 bp deletion sequence from SEQ ID NO:9.
(38) SEQ ID NO:22: shows the sequence of the 20 bp protospacer.
(39) SEQ ID NO:23: shows the genomic sequence of hexokinase gene from T. gondii.
(40) SEQ ID NO:24: sequence of gBlock No. 1.
(41) SEQ ID NO:25: sequence of gBlock No. 2.
(42) SEQ ID NO:26: sequence of gBlock No. 3.
(43) SEQ ID NO:27: sequence of gBlock No. 4.
(44) SEQ ID NO:28: sequence of gBlock No. 5.
(45) SEQ ID NO:29: sequence of gBlock No. 6.
(46) SEQ ID NO:30: sequence of gBlock No. 7.
(47) SEQ ID NO:31: sequence of gBlock No. 8.
(48) SEQ ID NO:32: sequence of gBlock No. 9.
(49) SEQ ID NO:33: sequence of gBlock No. 10.
(50) SEQ ID NO:34: sequence of forward primer.
(51) SEQ ID NO:35: sequence of reverse primer.
(52) SEQ ID NO:36: sequence of forward primer.
(53) SEQ ID NO:37: sequence of reverse primer.
(54) SEQ ID NO:38: sequence of forward primer.
(55) SEQ ID NO:39: sequence of reverse primer.
(56) SEQ ID NO:40: sequence of forward primer.
(57) SEQ ID NO:41: sequence of reverse primer.
(58) SEQ ID NO:42: sequence of forward primer.
(59) SEQ ID NO:43: sequence of reverse primer.
(60) SEQ ID NO:44: sequence of reverse primer.
(61) SEQ ID NO:45: sequence of forward primer.
(62) SEQ ID NO:46: sequence of forward primer.
(63) SEQ ID NO:47: sequence of short linker.
(64) SEQ ID NO:48: sequence of long linker.
(65) SEQ ID NO:49: sequence of forward primer.
(66) SEQ ID NO:50: sequence of forward primer.
(67) SEQ ID NO:51: sequence of reverse primer.
(68) SEQ ID NO:52: sequence of forward primer.
(69) SEQ ID NO:53: sequence reverse primer.
(70) SEQ ID NO:54: sequence of reverse primer.
(71) SEQ ID NO:55: sequence of forward primer.
(72) SEQ ID NO:56: oligonucleotide sequence.
(73) SEQ ID NO:57: oligonucleotide sequence.
(74) SEQ ID NO:58: oligonucleotide sequence.
(75) SEQ ID NO:59: oligonucleotide sequence.
(76) SEQ ID NO:60: oligonucleotide sequence.
(77) SEQ ID NO:61: oligonucleotide sequence.
(78) SEQ ID NO:62: oligonucleotide sequence.
(79) SEQ ID NO:63: oligonucleotide sequence.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(80) General
(81) Throughout this specification, unless specifically stated otherwise or the context requires otherwise, reference to a single step, composition of matter, group of steps or group of compositions of matter shall be taken to encompass one and a plurality (i.e. one or more) of those steps, compositions of matter, groups of steps or group of compositions of matter.
(82) Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the present disclosure is susceptible to variations and modifications other than those specifically described. It is to be understood that the disclosure includes all such variations and modifications. The disclosure also includes all of the steps, features, compositions and compounds referred to or indicated in this specification, individually or collectively, and any and all combinations or any two or more of said steps or features.
(83) The present disclosure is not to be limited in scope by the specific examples described herein, which are intended for the purpose of exemplification only. Functionally-equivalent products, compositions and methods are clearly within the scope of the disclosure.
(84) Any example of the present disclosure herein shall be taken to apply mutatis mutandis to any other example of the disclosure unless specifically stated otherwise.
(85) Unless specifically defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein shall be taken to have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art (for example, in cell culture, molecular genetics, immunology, immunohistochemistry, protein chemistry, and biochemistry).
(86) Unless otherwise indicated, the recombinant protein, cell culture, and immunological techniques utilized in the present disclosure are standard procedures, well known to those skilled in the art. Such techniques are described and explained throughout the literature in sources such as, Perbal (1984), Sambrook et al., (1989), Brown (1991), Glover and Hames (1995 and 1996), and Ausubel et al., (1988, including all updates until present), Harlow and Lane, (1988), Coligan et al., (including all updates until present) and Zola (1987).
(87) Throughout this specification the word “comprise”, or variations such as “comprises” or “comprising”, will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated element, integer or step, or group of elements, integers or steps, but not the exclusion of any other element, integer or step, or group of elements, integers or steps.
(88) As used herein the term “derived from” shall be taken to indicate that a specified integer may be obtained from a particular source albeit not necessarily directly from that source.
(89) The present invention employs conventional molecular biology, microbiology and recombinant DNA techniques within the skill of the art. See for example, Sambrook et al “Molecular Cloning” A Laboratory Manual (1989).
Selected Definitions
(90) The term “and/or”, e.g., “X and/or Y” shall be understood to mean either “X and Y” or “X or Y” and shall be taken to provide explicit support for both means or for either meaning.
(91) Reference to the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” is also understood to imply the inclusion of plural forms unless the context dictates otherwise.
(92) Furthermore, “and/or” where used herein is to be taken as specific disclosure of each of the two specified features or components with or without the other. Thus, the term “and/or” as used in a phrase such as “A and/or B” herein is intended to include “A and B,” “A or B,” “A” (alone), and “B” (alone). Likewise, the term “and/or” as used in a phrase such as “A, B, and/or C” is intended to encompass each of the following embodiments: A, B, and C; A, B, or C; A or C; A or B; B or C; A and C; A and B; B and C; A (alone); B (alone); and C (alone).
(93) The term “about” is used herein to mean approximately, roughly, around, or in the regions of. When the term “about” is used in conjunction with a numerical range, it modifies that range by extending the boundaries above and below the numerical values set forth. In general, the term “about” is used herein to modify a numerical value above and below the stated value by a variance of 10 percent (%), up or down (higher or lower).
(94) By “isolated” it is meant a parasite that is removed from its native environment. In a particular example, it refers to a mutant parasite whose genotype is altered relative to the native parasite.
(95) The term “disruption” as used herein refers to a gene (e.g. the TPS/TPP-like gene) whose native sequence has been modified through insertion or deletion of nucleotides within the sequence. The insertion or deletion may encompass a single nucleotide or up to thousands of nucleotides within the target sequence. The nucleotides being inserted or deleted may be continguous, partially contiguous or non-contiguous. The term “disruption” is understood to encompass mutations which are introduced at a particular nucleotide location within a sequence or directed to occur within a particular region of nucleotides targeted for mutation. Non-targeted disruptions which are also encompassed by the term “disruption” are understood to refer to randomly introduced mutations into a sequence, meaning that the mutation is introduced at a random location (which is not predetermined) within a given sequence. The CRISPR-derived mutations described herein are generally understood in the art to refer to a targeted mutations. While it cannot be predicted whether the CRISPR repair mechanism with result in an insertion or deletion of nucleotides, the proto-spacer and PAM motif are used to direct the mutations to a particular location within a sequence (e.g. the TPS/TPP-like gene described herein).
(96) The term “knock-out” as referred to herein refers to a process in which a part or all of a gene is replaced or disrupted with an artificial piece of DNA such as DNA from Toxoplasma or another organism or from the Cas9 and RNA guide containing plasmid used for transfection.
(97) The term “native TPS/TPP-like gene” as used herein refers to a gene having both trehalose phosphate synthase (TPS) and trehalose 6-phosphate phosphatase (TPP) domains arranged in tandem, as well as an N-terminal amylopectin-binding CBM20 domain. Said gene is that in the form in which it naturally occurs in a given parasite. For example, the native TPS/TPP-like gene sequence in Toxoplasma can be derived from the ToxoDB Gene ID TGGT1_297720 (shown in
(98) The term “inactivating mutation” as referred to herein refers to a mutation which negatively affects transcription of a given gene so that the resulting protein cannot be produced. Inactivating mutations can be produced by different means, for example deletion of native nucleotides or insertion of heterologous nucleotides within the gene sequence. An inactivating mutation can also be caused by an insertion or deletion that results in a frame shift in the gene sequence compared to the native sequence.
(99) The term “homolog thereof” of a TPS/TPP-like gene refers to a gene sequence that is genetically related to a TPS/TPP-like gene designated ToxoDB Gene ID TGGT1_297720 (shown in
(100) The term “Coccidia” as used herein refers to an obligate intracellular parasite belonging to the apicomplexan class. Such parasites must live and reproduce within an animal cell.
(101) The term “composition”, as used herein, means any composition, which contains at least one therapeutically or biologically active agent and is suitable for administration to a subject. Any of these formulations can be prepared by well-known and accepted methods of the art. See, for example, Gennaro, A. R., ed., Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy, 20th Edition, Mack Publishing Co., Easton, Pa. (2000).
(102) The phrase “pharmaceutically acceptable” is employed herein to refer to those compounds, materials, compositions, and/or dosage forms that are, within the scope of sound medical judgment, suitable for use in contact with the tissues of human beings and animals without excessive toxicity, irritation, allergic response, and/or other problem or complication, commensurate with a reasonable benefit/risk ratio.
(103) The term “animal” as used herein refers to any warm-blooded animal, including non-human animals (e.g. cat, sheep) or primate (e.g. human or monkey).
(104) The term “vaccinating” as used herein refers to a process of inducing immunity to an infectious organism in an animal through immunization. Typically, immunisation of an animal is designed to provide protection against further challenge with the same infectious organism (i.e. immunogen) by stimulating the animal's immune system.
(105) The term “proto-spacer adjacent motif (PAM)” sequence refers to a 2-6 base pair DNA sequence immediately following the DNA sequence targeted by the Cas9 nuclease in the CRISPR system. Cas9 will not successfully bind to or cleave the target DNA sequence if it is not followed by the PAM sequence. The canonical PAM sequence is 5′-NGG-3′ wherein N is any nucleobase followed by two guanine (G) nucleobases.
(106) The term “uncontrolled” should be given its ordinary meaning. Its understood to mean growth that occurs in a unrestrained manner.
(107) The term “Toxoplasma” as used herein is understood to refer to Toxoplasma gondii and the terms can be used interchangeably.
(108) Lifecycle of Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii)
(109) Toxoplasma primarily exists in three forms that are infective to humans and animals, oocysts (containing sporozites), tachyzoites and bradyzoites. All three stages are infectious for both intermediate and definitive hosts which may acquire a Toxoplasma infection mainly via one of the following routes: (A) horizontally by oral ingestion of infectious oocysts from the environment, (B) horizontally by oral ingestion of tissue cysts contained in raw or undercooked meat or primary offal (viscera) of intermediate hosts, or (C) vertically by transplacental transmission of tachyzoites. In addition, in several hosts tachyzoites may also be transmitted in the milk from the mother to the offspring.
(110) Oocysts are thought to be only produced in the definitive host, members of the family Felidae. When passed in faeces, the oocysts can infect humans and other intermediate hosts (essentially any warm blooded animal). They then develop into tachyzoites which multiply rapidly by repeated endodyogeny. They divide rapidly in cells, causing tissue destruction and spreading the infection. Eventually tachyzoites localise to muscle tissues and the CNS where they convert to tissue cysts, or bradyzoites. This is thought to be a response to the host immune reaction.
(111) Tissue cysts (containing bradyzoites) have a high affinity for neural and muscular tissues. They are located predominantly in the central nervous system (CNS), the eye, as well as skeletal and cardiac muscles. However, to a lesser extent they may also be found in visceral organs, such as lungs, liver, and kidneys. Tissue cysts are the terminal life-cycle stage in the intermediate host and are immediately infectious. In some intermediate host species, they may persist for the life of the host. The mechanism of this persistence is unknown. However, many investigators believe that tissue cysts break down periodically, with bradyzoites transforming to tachyzoites that reinvade host cells and again transform to bradyzoites within new tissue cysts (Dubey J P et al. (1998) Clin Microbiol. Rev 11:267-99).
(112) Ingestion of cysts in contaminated meat results in the bradyzoites transforming back into tachyzoites upon entering the new host.
(113) Toxoplasma was first recognised to be an important pathogen in livestock species following reports from New Zealand describing Toxoplasma organisms in placental tissue from aborting sheep and within an aborted ovine foetus (Hartley et al. (1954) Aust Vet J 30: 216-218, Hartley & Marshall, (1957) NZ Vet J 5: 119-124). The discovery in the late 1960's that cats could shed a new form of the parasite in their faeces that was very stable in the environment led to the recognition of the cat as the definitive host of the parasite.
(114) Virtually all edible portions of an animal can harbor viable Toxoplasma. In one study, viable Toxoplasma was isolated from 17% of 1,000 adult pigs (sows) from a slaughter plant in Iowa. Toxoplasma infection is also prevalent in game animals. Among wild game, Toxoplasma infection is most prevalent in black bears and in white-tailed deer. Approximately 80% of black bears are infected in the U.S., and about 60% of raccoons have antibodies to Toxoplasma Because raccoons and bears scavenge for their food, infection in these animals is a good indicator of the prevalence of Toxoplasma in the environment.
(115) The number of Toxoplasma tissue cysts in meat from food animals is very low. It is estimated that as few as 1 tissue cyst may be present in 100 grams of meat.
(116) Toxoplasma parasites suitable for use in the present disclosure can be obtained from a depository such as the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). The ATCC includes multiple deposits of Toxoplasma, for example ATCC Number PRA-340, PRA-426, PRA-344, 50950, 50174, 40050, 50839, 50940, 50611, 40615, 50943, 50942, 50856, 50851 and 50947.
(117) Energy Utilisation of Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii)
(118) Toxoplasma tachyzoites must salvage carbon sources and other essential nutrients from their host cell. Toxoplasma reside within a unique parasitophorous vacuole in infected host cells that is surrounded by membrane that is thought freely permeable to many host metabolites.
(119) To derive its energy, tachyzoites utilise both glucose and glutamine scavenged from the host cell (MacRae J I et al. (2012) Host Cell Microbe 12:682-692) and following host cell egress, tachyzoites accumulate γ-aminobutyric acid which may provide extracellular tachyzoites with a short term energy reserve to fuel motility and invasion (MacRae J I et al. (2012) Host Cell Microbe 12:682-692). Toxoplasma tachyzoites also produce the storage polysaccharide amylopectin which contains a backbone of α(1-4)-linked glucose residues modified with α(1-6)-linked branch points. Tachyzoites generally express very low levels of amylopectin unless stressed, in contrast bradyzoites and oocytes accumulate high levels of amylopectin granules in the cytoplasm (Coppin A et al. (2003) Biochimie 85:353-361). It has been postulated that amylopectin granules may be a long-term energy storage during transmission to maintain parasite viability in low-nutrient niches and/or to drive rapid differentiation when they encounter favourable conditions. However, little is known about how amylopectin accumulation and utilisation is regulated in different Toxoplasma life cell stages.
(120) Amylopectin Characterisation
(121) Structural and gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy analysis has determined that the granules in Toxoplasma are genuine amylopectin composed of α(1-4)-linked glucan linear chains with a low proportion of α(1-6) branches. The chains have an average length of 19 glucose molecules (Guerardel Y et al (2005) Microbes Infect 7(1):41-8).
(122) Amylopectin is found in all stages of Toxoplasma. However, it has been experimentally shown that conversion of dormant encysted bradyzoites into newly transformed tachzyoites correlates with the disappearance of amylopectin granules (Coppin A et al. (2003) Biochimie 85:353-361). In Toxoplasma, during tissue cyst formation, there is synthesis of numerous (average: 21.8, range: 7-38) amylopectin granules within the bradyzoite at an average size of 358 nm (range: 192-630 nm) and the presence of specific lectin binding sugars in the cysts well (Von Brand, 1973). The bradyzoite form produces an extraordinarily high amount of amylopectin (glucose polymer) while it develops in glucose rich environments such as brain or muscle cells because of the decreased need for nutrients during this inactive period.
(123) Amylopectin granules have been found to be present in a considerable range of sizes. The large amylopectin granules exhibit a rigid compact coiled ball of string structure to store large amounts of glucose molecules and have dimensions of the order of 0.4 μm. The neatly coiled, smooth-surfaced ‘ball of string’ structure of the larger amylopectin contrasts markedly with the more irregular shape and rod-like particulate composition of the smaller granules (Harris J R et al., (2004) Parasitology 128(Pt 3):269-82). Amylopectin granules can be identified using techniques such as iodine staining, periodic-acid Schiff staining or electron microscopy amongst others.
(124) Trehalose-6-Phosphate Synthase/6-Phosphate Phosphatase (TPS/TPP)-Like Gene
(125) Many fungi and plants synthesize the disaccharide, trehalose, via the concerted actions of the two enzymes, trehalose phosphate synthase (TPS) and trehalose phosphate phosphatase (TPP) (Thammahong A et al., (2017) Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 15; 81(2)). Trehalose synthesis is often increased under conditions of cellular stress, reflecting the potential role of this sugar as a short term energy reserve and as a compatible solute, stabilizing proteins in vivo. In addition, the constitutive synthesis and degradation of trehalose via an ATP-consuming futile cycle, may have a critical role in balancing fluxes through upper (ATP consuming) and lower (ATP generating) glycolysis in some fungi. Intriguingly, the genomes of all strains of T. gondii encode a protein which contains both TPS and TPP domains (toxodb accession no. TGME49_297720).
(126) Both TPS and TPP proteins, and the trehalose biosynthetic pathway in which they function, are not present in mammalian cells. The Toxoplasma homologue (referred to herein as the TPS/TPP-like gene) contains both trehalose 6-phosphate synthase (TPS)-like and trehalose 6-phosphate phosphatase (TPP)-like domains arranged in tandem, as well as an N-terminal amylopectin-binding CBM20 domain, allowing for direct interaction with amylopectin.
(127) Initial sequence analysis indicated that the TPS domain of Toxoplasma gondii, TgTPS/TPP shared strong homology with TPS proteins from E. coli, S. cerevisiae and A. thaliana, including residues important for binding the UDP-glucose donor. However the Toxoplasma TPS domain lacked several residues that are important TPS catalysis, including Gly22, Va1366 and Lys267 (important for UDP-glucose binding) and Arg9, Arg300 and Tyr76 (important for glucose-6-phosphate binding), raising the possibility that this domain may not have T6P synthase activity. Similarly, while the C-terminal TgTPP-like domain appears to possess all the conserved motifs necessary for phosphatase activity, the TgTPP sequence contains additional insertions that may interfere with activity. Consistent with the possibility that the TgTPS/TPP lacks either trehalose phosphate synthase or trehalose-phosphate phosphatase activity, neither trehalose or trehalose phosphate could be detected in total cell extracts of tachyzoites using either GC/MS and LC/MS.
(128) The tandem arrangement of TPS-like and TPP-like domains is also present in 11 paralogs found in Arabidopsis (Vandesteene L et al., (2012) Plant physiology 160:884-896), although only three of these have been shown to have T6P synthase activity (Vandesteene et al., (2012) and Delorge I et al., (2015) The Biochemical Journal 466:283-290) and none of these have been shown to have T6P phosphatase activity.
(129) In addition to the dual domain proteins, Arabidopsis contains 10 proteins that contain an enzymatically active T6P phosphatase domain, but lack the TPS-like domain altogether (Vogel G et al., (1998) The Plant Journal: for cell and molecular biology 13:673-683). In yeast, the TPS and TPP proteins are separate, but form a complex with two additional accessory proteins (Bell W et al., (1992) European Journal of Biochemistry 209:951-959; Bell W et al., (1998) The Journal of Biological Chemistry 273:33311-33319; Vuorio 0. E et al., (1993) European Journal of Biochemistry 216:849-861). Importantly, the S. cerevisiae yeast homolog TPS1 is required for growth on glucose and disruption of this gene leads to accumulation of G6P (Eastmond P. J. and Graham I. A. et al., (2003) Current opinion in plant biology 6:231-235; Hohmann S. et al (1996) Molecular Biology 20:981-991). At least some Arabidopsis paralogs are also involved in sugar signalling and plant development (Eastmond P. J. et al., (2002) The Plant Journal: for cell and molecular biology 29:225-235; Gomez L. D. et al., (2006) The Plant Journal: for cell and molecular biology 46:69-84; Gomez L. D. et al., (2010) The Plant Journal: for cell and molecular biology 64:1-13; van Dijken A. J. et al., (2004) Plant physiology 135:969-977).
(130) The sequence of the TPS/TPP-like gene in T. gondii is identified as ToxoDB Gene ID TGGT1_297720, the sequence of which is shown in
(131) Disrupting the TPS/TPP-Like Gene
(132) As described herein, the present disclosure is directed to mutant parasites having a TPS/TPP-like gene which is disrupted resulting in gene inactivation. Inactivation of the TPS/TPP-like gene in the parasite can be effected by a number of different methods which are known in the art. The present disclosure is based on the finding that inactivation of the TPS/TPP-like gene in Toxoplasma results in amylopectin accumulation in the mutant parasites when grown in glucose-containing but not glucose-free medium.
(133) A mutant of the present disclosure can be generated using any suitable method conventionally employed for producing gene knockout mutants. For example, a mutant can be obtained by single cross-over integration (e.g. as described in Fox and Bzik (2002) Nature 451(6874):926-9) or using a double cross-over gene replacement (Kim K et al., (1993) Science November 5; 262(5135):911-4).
(134) In general, the generation of mutant Toxoplasma includes isolating the nucleic acid molecule of interest from Toxoplasma (e.g., as described herein); replacing, mutating, substituting or deleting all or a portion (e.g., one or more bp) of the gene to disrupt the coding or regulatory regions of the gene; and integrating the disrupted molecule into the genome of Toxoplasma. Using an appropriate drug-selectable marker e.g hxgprt, chloramphenicol acetyl transferase, DHFR-ts, or phleomycin, the mutant bearing the mutated sequence can be selected.
(135) In particular embodiments, the selectable marker is selected for by positive and negative selection (e.g., HXGPRT).
(136) Disruption of all or a portion of the TPS/TPP-like gene can be achieved by, e.g., replacing the coding sequence with a nucleic acid molecule encoding selectable marker, replacing the coding sequence with a nucleic acid molecule encoding an exogenous protein, etc. As is known to the skilled artisan, subsequent restriction endonuclease digestion and Southern blot analysis or sequencing of the mutant Toxoplasma genomic DNA can be used to confirm the disruption.
(137) While mutants of the present invention can be produced from a virulent type I strain such as RH (as exemplified herein), a type II strain (as exemplified herein) as well as a type III strain can also be employed as well as any other strains belonging to Clades, A, B, C, D, E or F. A mutant of the present invention can alternatively be generated using Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) as described (Shen Z et al., (2014) Dev Cell September 8; 30(5):625-36; Sidik S. M. et al PLoS One 2014 Jun. 27; 9(6):e100450 PMID:24971596). Briefly, the technology consists of a guide RNA (gRNA) and a DNA endonuclease, Cas9 (typically from Streptococcus pyogenes). The gRNA (or protospacer sequence) determines where insertions or deletions (indels) will occur. Once the gRNA and Cas9 are expressed in cells, the gRNA will direct Cas9 to bind to the target sequence and introduce a double-strand break. The cell can then repair the break with either non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) or homologous directed repair (HDR). NHEJ is the most active repair mechanism in Toxoplasma and often leads to indels near the target sequence. If the insertion or deletion occurs within the open reading frame, it may introduce a frameshift that causes a premature stop codon, eliminating the gene function. If a homologous template is provided then HDR recombination can occur and also lead to the disruption or modification of the gene. In the current technology (Shen et al 2014 and Sidik et al 2014) guide sequences/protospacers are selected based on being adjacent to an PAM ‘NGG’ motif and consisting of 20 bps. A ‘G’ can be added to the 5′ end to better initiate transcription. Protospacer sequences and their adjacent PAM motifs can be selected on either DNA strand, throughout the whole gene including promoters, terminators, coding sequence or introns or any other part of the gene that could affect the levels or fidelity of the gene product.
(138) As described herein, by way of non-limiting example, mutant parasites can be generated by using mutagenesis to replace the UPRT proto-spacer sequence of plasmid pSAG1-Cas9-U6-sgUPRT with the target TPS/TPP proto-spacer sequence (SEQ ID NO:22) and transfecting the construct into the parasites to initiate the CRISPR/Cas9 protocol. Screening of mutants can be achieved for example using Fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) to sort the parasites into the wells of a 96 well microplate and then culturing for a period of time sufficient to identify clones that produced visible starch granules (amylopectin) when grown in glucose containing medium. Once a mutant clone is identified it can be maintained in glucose-free medium but containing glutamine to propagate the parasite until such time as it is required for vaccination. Mutants can also be isolated by initially growing transfected cells in glutamine media, cloning these out by limited dilution and then identifying those that are mutants by looking for the production of amylopectin when transferred to glucose-containing media.
(139) Preferably, the mutant parasites of the invention are attenuated when grown in glucose-containing medium. As is conventional in the art, the term “attenuated” refers to a weakened and/or less vigorous version of the native strain. Desirably, the attenuated mutant of the invention is capable of stimulating an immune response and creating immunity but not causing illness. Attenuation can be determined using methods as shown herein in the examples. In some examples, the extent of attenuation is at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 90% at least 95%, or greater than 95% relative to the corresponding wild-type parasite grown in the same medium.
(140) Determining TPS/TPP-Like Gene Inactivation
(141) Inactivation of the TPS/TPP-like gene can be assessed by examining amylopectin production by the mutant parasite in glucose-containing and glutamine-containing medium. For example, growth of mutant parasites can be assessed by plaque assays known in the art and as described herein. Plaque assays can be performed by assessing the growth capacity through the lytic cycle on confluent layers of human foreskin fibroblasts in medium containing either glucose or glutamine as a carbon source. Inactivation of the TPS/TPP-like gene will be evident by the accumulation of amylopectin granules in the tachyzoites themselves which can be observed by Pas staining. Growth of the same mutant parasite on glutamine containing medium should be comparable to wild-type parasites and if such mutant parasites are transferred to a glutamine containing medium, this should result in the disappearance or reduction of amylopectin granules in the parasites.
(142) Virulence assays in mice can be performed as described herein. Survival and body weight of mice transfected with the mutant parasites can be measured over time. Mutants in which the TPS/TPP-like gene is inactivated will not significantly affect mice body weight over time compared to wild-type parasites which will result in loss of body weight in the mice and susceptibility to infection.
(143) Vaccines
(144) The present disclosure encompasses vaccines comprising the mutant parasites described herein. Preferably, the vaccine also includes a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient or diluent. The skilled person will know which appropriate excipient or diluent to use depending upon whether the vaccine is intended for human or veterinary use.
(145) Administration of a mutant parasite disclosed herein can be carried out by any suitable means, including parenteral injection (such as intraperitoneal, subcutaneous, or intramuscular injection), orally, or by topical application (typically carried in a pharmaceutical formulation) to an airway surface. Topical application to an airway surface can be carried out by intranasal administration (e.g., by use of dropper, swab, or inhaler which deposits a pharmaceutical formulation intranasally). Oral administration can be in the form of an ingestible liquid or solid formulation.
(146) In one example, the pharmaceutically acceptable excipient or diluent is an aqueous carrier. A variety of aqueous carriers can be used, e.g., buffered saline and the like. Exemplary carriers include water, saline, Ringer's solution, dextrose solution, and 5% human serum albumin. The compositions may contain pharmaceutically acceptable carriers as required to approximate physiological conditions such as pH adjusting and buffering agents, toxicity adjusting agents and the like, for example, sodium acetate, sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, sodium lactate and the like. Non-aqueous vehicles such as mixed oils and ethyl oleate may also be used. The vehicles may contain minor amounts of additives that enhance isotonicity and chemical stability, e.g., buffers and preservatives.
(147) The vaccines of the present invention can include one or more veterinary-acceptable carriers. As used herein, “a veterinary-acceptable carrier” includes any and all solvents, dispersion media, coatings, adjuvants, stabilizing agents, diluents, preservatives, antibacterial and antifungal agents, isotonic agents, adsorption delaying agents, and the like. Diluents can include water, saline, dextrose, ethanol, glycerol, and the like. Isotonic agents can include sodium chloride, dextrose, mannitol, sorbitol, and lactose, among others. Stabilizers include albumin, among others. Adjuvants include, but are not limited to, the RIBI adjuvant system (Ribi Inc.), alum, aluminum hydroxide gel, Cholesterol, oil-in water emulsions, water-in-oil emulsions such as, e.g., Freund's complete and incomplete adjuvants, Block co-polymer (CytRx, Atlanta Ga.), SAF-M (Chiron, Emeryville Calif.), AMPHIGEN® adjuvant, saponin, Quil A, QS-21 (Cambridge Biotech Inc., Cambridge Mass.), GPI-0100 (Galenica Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Birmingham, Ala.) or other saponin fractions, monophosphoryl lipid A, Avridine lipid-amine adjuvant, heat-labile enterotoxin from E. coli (recombinant or otherwise), cholera toxin, or muramyl dipeptide, among many others.
(148) Administration can be given in a single dose schedule, or a multiple dose schedule in which a primary course of treatment can be with 1-10 separate doses, followed by other doses given at subsequent time intervals required to maintain and or reinforce the response, for example, at 1-4 months for a second dose, and if needed, a subsequent dose(s) after several months
(149) Vaccine efficacy can be affected by a number of factors including the health status of the animal, genetic constitution, inter-current infection, age, nutritional status, current drug therapy and stress. Thus, in some examples it may be necessary to administer a further booster vaccine as described above.
(150) The exact dosage for administration can be determined by the skilled practitioner, in light of factors related to the animal that requires prevention or treatment. Dosage and administration are adjusted to provide sufficient levels of the mutant parasite or vaccine containing same or to maintain the desired effect of preventing or reducing signs or symptoms of toxoplasmosis. Factors which may be taken into account include the severity of the disease state, general health of the subject, age, weight, and gender of the animal, diet, time and frequency of administration, drug combination(s), reaction sensitivities, and tolerance/response to therapy.
(151) In certain examples, the vaccine dose comprises at least about 1,000-2,000 parasites (e.g. tachyzoites). In other example, the vaccine dose may comprise at least about 1,500, 1,800, 2,200, 2,500, 5,000, 8,000 or 10,000 or greater parasites (e.g. tachyzoites) depending on the animal.
(152) In certain examples, the vaccine dose may comprise at least about 20 oocysts. In other examples, the vaccine comprises at least about 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100 oocysts. In yet another example, the vaccine comprises between 100 and 200 oocysts.
(153) Uses of the Mutant Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii)
(154) In certain examples, the mutant Toxoplasma of the present disclosure can be used as a vehicle to deliver exogenous antigens from non-Toxoplasma disease agents (i.e., antigens not naturally expressed by the Toxoplasma). For example, CRISPR technology can be utilised to replace the TPS/TPP-like gene with an exogenous gene the encodes an antigen for which immunisation is desired.
(155) Specific examples of exogenous antigens include tetanus toxoid (tetC), malarial antigens such as circumsporozoite protein (CSP) and merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1), Bacillus anthracis protective antigen, Yersinia pestis antigen, antigens from bacterial pathogens such as Francisella tularensis, Mycobacteria, Legionella, Burkholderia, Brucella, and Coxiella; antigens from viruses, particularly intracellular invaders such as HIV; other toxoids such as botulinum toxoid or Epsilon toxin; tumor antigens; multiagent biodefense antigens; antigens from non-biothreat infectious agents; plague antigens; and combinations of any of these.
(156) In other examples, the mutant of Toxoplasma can be used to express any other genes one would want to express within a mammalian host cell. This could include genes encoding therapeutic peptides or proteins, e.g., therapeutic antibodies (e.g., Trastuzumab) proteins (e.g., interferons, blood factors, insulin, erythropoietin, and blood clotting factors), or enzymes (e.g., asparaginase, catalase, lipase, and tissue plasminogen activator) used in the treatment of diseases or conditions; as well as proteins, enzymes or peptides of use in screening assays to identify inhibitors or activators (i.e., effectors) of the same.
(157) Additional non-Toxoplasma vaccine antigens that may be included are Leptospira antigens, clostridial antigens, rabies antigens, Campylobacter antigens and Corynebacterim antigens. The mutant Toxoplasma or vaccine containing the same can be employed in various methods inducing an immune response and protecting a subject against infection by Toxoplasma and/or a non-Toxoplasma disease. Such methods generally involve administering to an animal in need of treatment (e.g., an animal at risk of being exposed to an infectious disease or at risk of developing cancer) an effective amount of an attenuated mutant Toxoplasma or vaccine of the present invention thereby generating an immune response and protecting the animal against infection by Toxoplasma and/or the non-Toxoplasma disease.
(158) An effective amount, as used in the context of the present disclosure, is an amount which produces a detectable immune response (e.g., a Th-1 response, natural granulocyte, neutrophil, macrophage, GR1+ macrophage, B cell, or T cell immune response) or antibody production. In accordance with some examples, the Toxoplasma mutant expresses an exogenous antigen thereby generating protective immunity against the pathogen or disease from which the antigen was derived or associated. However, in other examples, the Toxoplasma mutant of the disclosure alone is sufficient to generate an immune response to Toxoplasma. An effective amount of a Toxoplasma mutant of the disclosure prevents or treats the signs or symptoms of Toxoplasma. Responses to administration can be measured by monitoring T cell or antibody responses according to any suitable method known in the art.
(159) In other example, the mutant Toxoplasma parasites described herein can be used to provide an industrial source of starch as an alternative to plant-derived sources of starch.
(160) The following specific examples are to be construed as merely illustrative, and not limitative of the remainder of the disclosure in any way whatsoever. Without further elaboration, it is believed that one skilled in the art can, based on the description herein, utilize the present invention to its fullest extent. All publications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety. Where reference is made to a URL or other such identifier or address, it is understood that such identifiers can change and particular information on the internet can come and go, but equivalent information can be found by searching the internet. Reference thereto evidences the availability and public dissemination of such information.
(161) It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that numerous variations and/or modifications may be made to the above-described embodiments, without departing from the broad general scope of the present disclosure. The present embodiments are, therefore, to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive.
EXAMPLES
(162) Materials and Methods
(163) Parasite Culture
(164) T. gondii tachyzoites were maintained in human foreskin fibroblasts (HFFs) in D1 medium (Dulbecco's Modified Eagle medium [DMEM] supplemented with 1% foetal calf serum [Invitrogen] and 2 mM Glutamax [Gibco]) in a humidified atmosphere of 10% CO.sub.2 at 37° C. For growth in glucose-free conditions, parasites were maintained in glucose-free DMEM supplemented with 4 mM glutamine and 6 mM Glutamax (Gibco). Before inoculation with parasites, HFFs were grown and maintained in D10 medium (DME supplemented with 10% cosmic calf serum [Thermo Scientific]).
(165) DNA Cloning and Transfections
(166) DNA amplification was performed using either PrimeSTAR HS or PrimeSTAR MAX DNA polymerase (Takara) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Restriction enzymes were from New England Biolabs (NEB). Oligonucleotide primers are provided in Table 1 below.
(167) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Oligonucleotide primers Oligo # Oligo sequence (5′ .fwdarw. 3′) Description 1 gggaattggcGTTTTAGAGCTAGAAAT TPS/TPP AGCAAG protospacer- (SEQ ID NO:10) Forward 2 cagagacgggcAACTTGACATCCCCAT TPS/TPP TTAC protospacer- (SEQ ID NO:11) Reverse 3 ATGCTGTACACCAGGGTTTTCTTCC Atps/tpp (SEQ ID NO:12) Screening- Forward 4 GATGCAGACTCTACGAGACAGGCAC Atps/tpp (SEQ ID NO:13) Screening- Reverse 5 CTCAGATCTACTTTCCCGAGAGGAAGA HxK HA GTG Ct-tagging- (SEQ ID NO:14) Forward 6 ttcctaggtcctgctccagcagcgtag HxK HA tccgggacatcgtacgggtatcctgca Ct-tagging- ccagcGTTCACATCTGCGATCAGAGC Reverse (SEQ ID NO:15) 7 GGTCTTCCCCGTCTCTGGGGAATTGAC Δtps/tpp TAGCTGAGCAGGTGAGGCTGCGTCGCC CRISPR stop- GTCGC Forward (SEQ ID NO:16) 8 GCGACGGCGACGCAGCCTCACCTGCTC Δtps/tpp AGCTAGTCAATTCCCCAGAGACGGGGA CRISPR stop- AGACC Reverse (SEQ ID NO:17)
Q5 mutagenesis (NEB) was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. Some plasmids were constructed in-house and details of these plasmids are available upon request.
(168) For electroporation using the 4D Nucleofector system (Lonza), 2×10.sup.6 parasites were suspended in 20 μl of supplemented P3 solution containing variable amounts of DNA dependent on the experiment. Transfection was carried out in 20 μl Nucleocuvette strips (Lonza) using the F1-115 program (T cell, human unstimulated, HE).
(169) Following electroporation, parasites were immediately transferred to HFFs in complete or glucose-free medium. For drug selection, recombinant parasites were selected by addition of chloramphenicol (20 μM), or mycophenolic acid (20 μg/mL) and xanthine (50 μg/mL), or with 5′-fluo-2′-deoxyuridine (FUDR) at 5 μM (for negative selection in the absence of uracil phosphoribosyl transferase [UPRT]).
(170) Disruption of the genomic sequence of the trehalose synthase/phosphatase (TPS/TPP) gene (ToxoDB Gene ID TGGT1_297720;
(171) This mutant comprises the sequence shown below:
(172) TABLE-US-00002 (SEQ ID NO: 18)
(173) The proto-spacer is indicated by underline and the PAM motif is in bold text. The insert sequence is highlighted.
(174) To counter the fact that the Δtps/tpp phenotype can revert back to wild-type phenotype over time in culture, Δtps/tpp parasites were also generated in glucose-free medium. By omitting glucose as a carbon source, the severe amylopectin phenotype is absent, but can be induced by subsequent addition of glucose to the medium. To do this, RH: Δhxgprt parasites that had been maintained in glucose-free DMEM supplemented with 4 mM glutamine and 6 mM Glutamax (Gibco), were transfected with 20 μg pSAG1-Cas9-U6-sgTPS/TPP. Parasites were cloned out by limiting dilution in glucose-free medium supplemented with Glutamax/glutamine. After 7 days, a clone of RH: Δhxgprt: Δtps/tpp) that produced starch granules when transferred to glucose-containing D1 medium was sequenced and found to contain a single base pair deletion resulting in gene disruption (
(175) For disruption of TPS/TPP in type II Pru:tdTomato parasites, 20 μg of pSAG1-Cas9-U6-sgTPS/TPP was transfected into parasites and cloned out immediately in 96-well plates at 5 parasites/well containing HFFs in D1 medium lacking glucose, but containing 6 mM glutamax and 4 mM glutamine. After 14 days, a single clonal line with visible starch accumulation was expanded further and sequenced, indicating the presence of a large >1 kb insert disrupting the TPS/TPP locus (
(176) This mutant comprises the sequence shown below:
(177) TABLE-US-00003 (SEQ ID NO: 19)
(178) The proto-spacer is indicated by underline and the PAM motif is in bold text. The insert sequence is highlighted. N indicates that the nucleotide base could not be determined from the sequence read.
(179) Generation of ΔTps/Tpp Mutant with HA-Tagged Hexokinase
(180) To generate Δtps/tpp parasites with hexokinase dual HA-tagged at its C-terminus, the 3′ region of the Toxoplasma hexokinase (HxK) gene (Toxo DB gene #TGGT1_265450;
(181) To disrupt TPS/TPP in the RH: Δhxgprt: Δku80:HxK-HA background, 10 μg of pSAG1-Cas9-U6-sgTPS/TPP was combined with 100 μg of annealed oligonucleotides 7 and 8 having the sequence 5′-GGTCTTCCCCGTCTCTGGGGAATTGACTAGCTGAGCAGGTGAGGCTGCGTCGCCGTCGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO:16) and 5′-GCGACGGCGACGCAGCCTCACCTGCTCAGCTAGTCAATTCCCCAGAGACGGGGAAGACC-3′ (SEQ ID NO:17) in Table 1 (Designed to insert a stop codon in the TPS/TPP reading frame) and electroporated into RH: Δhxgprt: Δku80:HxK-HA parasites.
(182) In order to obtain viable parasites, the transfection and cloning procedures had to be carried out in glucose-free D1 medium supplemented with glutamine/Glutamax. Transfected parasites were cloned at 3 parasites/well in 96-well plates and a clone that produced starch granules when transferred to glucose-containing D1 medium was sequenced and found to contain a deletion of 58 bp resulting in TPS/TPP gene disruption (
(183) TABLE-US-00004 (SEQ ID NO:21) GTCGCCGTCGTCGGGTCTTCCCCGTCTCTGGGGAATTGGCAGgtgaggc tgcgtcgcc
To generate Δcdpk2 parasites in the RH:Δhxgprt:Δku80:HxK-HA background, 20 μg of the CDPK2 gene knockout construct used previously (Uboldi A et al. (2015) Host Cell and Microbe 18:670-681), was digested with Nhe I/Cla I for transfection. Parasites were cloned by limiting dilution.
Plaque Assay to Determine Growth of ΔTps/Tpp Parasites in Glucose-Free and Glutamine-Free Conditions
(184) Parasites were scraped and passed through a 27-gauge needle to release intracellular parasites. Low speed centrifugation (450 rpm for 3 min in a Beckman GS-6KR centrifuge) was used to pellet debris and intact cells. This was followed by centrifugation at 2000 rpm for 5 min to pellet parasites. The parasites were resuspended in 10 ml of DMEM medium lacking both glucose and glutamine and centrifuged as before to pellet the parasites. The parasites were counted and added at 200 parasites/well to the wells of 6-well plates housing confluent HFF monolayers in medium containing both 5.55 mM glucose and 4 mM glutamine, or lacking either glucose or glutamine. The plaque assays were developed after 7 days by removing the medium, fixing with 80% ethanol for 20 min and staining the monolayer with crystal violet stain (2% crystal violet (w/v) and 0.16% ammonium oxalate in 20% ethanol) for 20 min. The monolayer was then washed with water to reveal plaques.
(185) Periodic Acid-Schiff (PAS) Staining
(186) Parasites were added to wells housing confluent HFF monolayers in medium containing both 5.55 mM glucose and 4 mM glutamine, or lacking either glucose or glutamine. The infected monolayers were incubated for 4 days at 37° C. and 10% CO.sub.2 before processing for PAS staining as follows: The medium was removed and the infected monolayers were washed once with PBS, followed by fixation with PBS/4% formaldehyde (Sigma) for 20 min. The formaldehyde fixative was removed and the fixed monolayer was washed twice with PBS before placing the coverslips in 80% ethanol and performing PAS staining using standard protocols. PAS-stained coverslips were mounted onto slides and PAS fluorescence was measured with the A594 channel on a AP Deltavision Elite microscope (GE Healthcare) equipped with a Coolsnap2 CCD detector and captured with SoftwoRx software (GE Healthcare). PAS stained colour images were captured using a Nikon 90i Upright/Widefield microscope (Nikon).
(187) Immunofluorescence Assays
(188) HFFs grown on coverslips were infected with parasites and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) in PBS (Sigma-Aldrich) for 25 min. Fixed samples were permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 10 min (BioRad), blocked for 1 hour with 3% (w/v) BSA (Sigma-Aldrich) in PBS and probed with primary antibodies overnight at 4° C., followed by Alexa Fluor-conjugated fluorescent secondary antibodies (Invitrogen) for 1 hour at room temperature. When DAPI staining of nuclei was required, 0.2 μg/ml (final concentration) DAPI was used. Images were taken with an AP DeltaVision Elite microscope (GE Healthcare) equipped with a CoolSnap2 CCD detector and captured with SoftWoRx software (GE Healthcare). Images were viewed using Image J software and assembled using Image J, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator software.
(189) Antibodies for the immunofluoresence assays were rat-anti-HA (clone 3F10; Roche), rabbit anti-GAP45 (a kind gift from Con Beckers, Univ. North Carolina) and mouse anti-SAG1 (DG52) (a kind gift from John Boothroyd, Stanford University).
(190) In Vivo Infection of Mice with Pru:tdTomato:ΔTps/Tpp Parasites
(191) Pru:tdTomato (WT) and Pru:tdTomato:Δtps/tpp parasites were scraped and passed through a 27-gauge needle to release intracellular parasites. A low speed centrifugation (450 rpm for 3 min) was used to pellet debris and intact cells. This was followed by centrifugation at 2000 rpm for 5 min to pellet parasites. The parasites were resuspended in 10 ml PBS and washed by centrifugation as above. The parasite pellets were the resuspended in PBS at a concentration of 10 000 parasites/100 μL. C57BL/6 mice were inoculated with 10 000 parasites and their weights and survival were monitored over several weeks.
(192) Hexokinase Activity Assays
(193) Freshly egressed RH:WT and RH:Hxk-HA parasites from T25 cultures were spun at low speed (350 rpm for 5 min in a Beckman GS-6KR centrifuge) to pellet cellular debris. The supernatants were centrifuged at 2000 rpm for 5 min to pellet the parasites. Parasite pellets were either used immediately for Hexokinase activity assays or stored at −80° C. for use at a later stage. Hexokinase assays were performed according to the manufacturer's instructions (Abcam), with slight modifications, as follows: The parasites were washed twice with ice-cold PBS before resuspending in 200-400 μl of ice-cold assay buffer and pipetting up-and-down 5-10 times to lyse the cells. The lysates were centrifuged for 5 min at 4° C., at 13 0000 rpm to pellet insoluble material. The supernatants were collected and used for hexokinase assays. For each reaction, 50 μl of lysate was combined with an equal volume of reaction mix prepared according to the kit instructions. The absorbance at 450 nm was then measured over time and hexokinase activity was determined by comparison to a standard curve of NADH absorbance and normalised to the protein concentration in the lysates determined by the BCA method (Pierce).
(194) Complementation Assays
(195) For complementation of Δtps/tpp parasites with either wild type TPS/TPP or modified heterologous proteins, the WT TgTPS/TPP and mutant cDNAs were ligated to the vector pHTU-3xHA (created in-house). This vector places the complementing wild type TgTPS/TPP and mutant variants under control of 2760 bp of the tubulin upstream region and introduces a triple-HA tag at the C-terminal end of the protein. The plasmid allows for selection with mycophenolic acid and contains a genomic DNA region from the UPRT locus to allow for stable integration of the constructs into this locus following selection with 5′-fluo-2′-deoxyuridine. To create a construct for complementation of Δtps/tpp parasites with full-length TgTPS/TPP, gBlock 1 (Table 2) was amplified with oligonucleotides 9 and 10, and gBlock 2 was amplified with oligonucleotides 11 and 12 (see Table 3).
(196) TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 2 gBlock sequences gBlock No. DNA sequence 1 catatagatctATGCTGTACACCAGGGTTTTCTTCCGTGCAGTGGTTCGGACAG TgTPS/TPP ACTTCGGTGAACGAGTCGCCGTCGTCGGGTCTTCCCCGTCTCTGGGGAAT TGGCAGGCTGAACACGGCCATGAGCTGACCACAAACGAGGATGTCTTCCC TTCGTGGTTCTCCAAGGAGCCTGTCTACTTGCCGCTAAAGAAACCCATATC TTACAAATATGTTGTTCTCGACGAACGCGGCGACATCGTGAGGTGGGAAG AATGCGAGGGAAATCGCGAGTTGGTGCCCACGGGCTTGGAGATGACGGT GGAGGATGACGATGGCCTTTTTAGGGAGCAGATGACGAATCGCGGCGAC CACGGAGTCGAAGGCGATGACGACGTGTCTGTGGCGGCTCTGGACAAGG AGGAGGTGGACGCGCGCAACCGGATGCTGGCGATTCAAGAAGAAGAGCC TGAGTTCGACGAGAACGACAGCGTAATTGTGTGTGCTCTTGACTTGCCTCT GCGCGTGGTGCGTGTCTCGCCGTCTCGTGAGGCTTCTCCGCTGCCCTCC TCgCTGCCtGCGTCGTCGACCGACTCTTCCGGCCAAACAGAAAAGCGaGC GGTTTCATTCCCGGAAGACGCGGGaGCGAGTGCaCGGCGCTCGAGTTCG ACCGTCGCGGCaACTCGGGAGGAGGAAACGACTCGCACTGCGAGTTCCT TTCCtAAAGTCGAGGAGACGGCGGAaAGAGGACGaGACAGCTCgCTCGCT CTTTGGCCTGGCGCAGCaCGCGACGCTGCCGGCGACTTCGGGGAGGCG CTTCAGCCGagaGCGACcCGCAGCCGACGAGGCACCTTTGAAGTGAGGCC GAGCAAGAGCGCGTTGcttCCTTCGCTGTTTCACCTGcgcAAGAAGACGCGG CTGCCTGTGCGTTTCGTCGGGTGGCCGGGaATCCACGTCGAGAACGAAG AGGAGCAGGCGGAGATTGCGGAGCTGCTGCGAGCCTACGACTGTTCGCC GATCTTCCCAGACAAAGACGAGTTCGACTGCCATCTCACCTTCTGCCATCA GGTCCTGTGGCCGCTGTTTCACAACGTCGTCGTCCTTGACTCCAATACCC AGGTCCCGTTCGACTCCGACCTCTGGGCCAAGTACCAGGCTGTGAACAAA CTGTGGGCGGACGCGGTGCTCCGCCAGGCGCACGAAACCGACATGGTCT GGGTCCACGACTACCACCTGCTCCTCGCGCCCATGCACATTACGCGGAAA GTCCGACGCGCCAACGTCGGCTTCTTTCTTCACATCCCCTTCCCCTCTTCC GAAATCTTCAGGTGTCTCCCTTGCCGAGAAGACATTTTGCGAGGGATGCT GTGCGCGGACTTGATTGGGTTTCACCTCTTCGAGTACGCGCGCCACTTTC TGGTCGCATGCAAGCGGCTGCTCGGCCTCGAGCACCATTTTTGTCGAGG GGGCATTCTGAACATCGAGTACGGCGGCCGCAACGTCTCGGTCCGCATC GGCCATGTCCACATTCAGTACGCCGACATTCGCTCGAAAATCGAGGCAAA CCCGGTGGTTCTGCAGATGGCGCGAGACATCAGACAAAAACACGTCGGA AAATTCATCTTCGTCTCCGTGGACCGCTGCGAGAAATTGGCCGGTCTCCT CCTCAAAGTTCGCGCCTTCCAGGCGTTTCTCGTGACCTACTCTTATGCCAG GGGAAATGTCGTCCTCATTCAGTACGCGTATCCTACCATCAAATACGCAGA AGACACAGAAACCATGGCGACGGAACTCAAAGAGCTCGTGGA (SEQ ID NO:24) 2 CTCAAAGAGCTCGTGGAGAAAGTCAATGCCCAGTTCGCCTTGCCAGATCG TgTPS/TPP CCCAGATTTCCAACATATCGAACTCCACATCCAGCCGGTCGGCTGGGAGG AGAAGTGGGCGTTGTTTACCGCGGGCGACTGCTTCCTTGACACATCGATC CGAGATGGCCTGAATCTCAATCCGTTCGAATTTATCTGTTGCCACAAAGAC AACGTCACCGGTGTGATTTTATCAGAGTTCACGGGGTGCAGCAGAGCCCT CGCCTCGGCCATTCGCGTCAATCCTTGGAAGGTGGAGGCGGTGGCAGAT GCGATGGACAGAATCATCAACATGCCTGTGGAGGAGCAGCGCGACCGGT TCACCCGCGACCGCGACTACTTGAGTCACAACAGTACGCAGAAGTGGGCA GACGAAAACATTCTGGATCTGCGACGAGCCCGGAAACCAGACGACTTCGT CTACGTCTCTTGGGGTCTCGGCAACACCTTCCGCGTCCTAGGCATGGACT CCAACTTCCGGTTTCTGGACACAAATCAAGTGGTGCGAGGCTACCGAACT TCTCGACATCGCGTCTTCTTCTTCGACTGCGAAGGCACACTCGCGCCGGA CAGACGCCGAATCACTTTTGTACCTGGCGGCGAAAATCTTTTTGCGCAAG GTCGCCCGCCTTCGCCGCAAGTCAAGGACTGTCTCCAGGCGCTTGTCGA CGACCAAAGAAACACTGTTGTCATTCTCTCGGGACGCGACAGACACCTCC TAGAGGAATGGTTCTCTTCCATCAGAGGCATTGGACTTTGTGCCGAACAC GGTTTTTACTACCGGGTTCCGGGCATCACGGGGGACCAGTGGCACTGCAT GTCTCGTCAAACAGACTTCACATGGAAGCAAGTGGCGATCGAGCTGATGC TGCAGTATGTGAAGCGAACTCAGGGCTCATTCATCGAAAACAAAGGAAGT GCTCTCGTCTTCCAGTACCGCGACGCAGATCCGGATTTCGGCAGCATGCA AGCCAAGGATCTCTCGAACTACCTCGGGGAACTGCTCTTCGGCTATCCTG TCTCGGTCATGAGCGGGAAAGGCTACGTGGAAGTGAAACTGCGAGGTGT CAACAAAGGGCATGCAGTCGAGAAAGTTCTGCGGAAACTCAGCAACCTCC ACGGAGACGTCGACTTCGTTCTCTGCGTCGGAGATGACAGAAGCGACGAA GACATGTTCGCGGTCATCAACGCaATGACGGAAGACGGaGACCAGCTGTG CCTGCCAGAGGGCAGCGGaGCCGGcAGCAGCGGCCTCTATCGCCACACg CAGTCGAAGGATCGAATTCCTAGACGCAACTCTGTCagtTCGGATGAGAAtC GAGCAGAAGCTGTCGTTGGAAACGTcGAaGGACTCATGAAGCGTGACGGc TCGATGCAaCAcGCaGGaGCaCTgGGatctGGaTTGACgagtGCaTCgTCtAGCA CcAGTCTtAGTGGaCACACcAAgAAgACcAGTCCgCACTTcTTCACcTGtACcG TCGGgAAGAAaCCtTCgAACGCaCGGTATTACCTgAACGACACgGAaGATGT CTCCGATCTgCTCGACTCgCTGCAGCAaTGCACTGAGAAaGACGGcAAGGA GCAGTGGAGTTCGagcAAGGACGCGAGTTGCCTCTCGGCaCCAGTCGTGG CaGCtGCaGCGGCtGCGGGaTCGCTCGCaGGcAACGCaGCGGTcCAGCTGc gcAAAGGCGACtctGCAGCaTCGAACTTTGCGAGTCTGTGGAGATCGCCgCT cGGATCtGGAGCtGGaCGCACcAGAGAgCGAACGCTCGCGCAGTGGGCtGG aCAGGCACCGAGCGCCATCTTCAGTCGaCCtGTCGGaGCaGTTGAgGTTCG aGCCAACGCAGCTGGCAGCACAGATCGCCCAACAGACGAGgctagcatat (SEQ ID NO:25) 3 catatagatctATGCACGAGATCGTcGACAAgAACGGAAAGAAGGTCCAgAAAAA PfHAD1 CAACctcAATGACGAGATCAAgATCATTTTCACAGACCTTGATGGCACGCTTc tGAATtcgGAGAATAAAGTTTCCGAACAGAACCTGGAGTCTCTTATCCGaGC GCAAGAAAAGGGGATCAAAGTGGTcATCGCgACGGGGCGATCTATCTTCA GCGTcGAAAACGTGATTGGCGAACACGTGAAGAAAAACcgcATTtctCTGCTT CCCGGCATCTAcATGAACGGcTGCGTgACGTTTGATGAAAAGGGATCTCGG GTcATCGACAGAATTATGAATAACGATctcAAgATGGAGATTCACGAATTCtct AAACAgATTAACATTTCgAAGTAcGCgATCTGGTTCTGcctcGAGAAGACGTA CTGcTTCGAAATCAATGACTGCATTCGcGAGTATATGGAGGTCGAGGCgctG AACCCGGATGTGATTGAAGACAATATGcTcGAGGGGCTGACAGTCTATAAg GTTCTCTTTTCGCTCCCGGAGAACATTCTGGAAAACACActtAAACTCTGTA GGGAGAAGTTTTCGCACAGGATCAACGTcGCgAATACCTTCCAgTCCTAcG TGGAGCTCTTCCACCAACATACCAATAAATTCGAAGGGGTgAAGGAAATCT GTAAATACTACAACATTTCCCTTAACAACGCCTTGGCCATGGGCGATGGC GAGAATGATATTGAAATGTTGTCGGGATTGACACATTCTGTTGGAGTTCAC AATGCgAGCGAGAAgGTTAAGAACTCGGCgGCCTATGTcGGGCCTTCTAAT AATGAACATGCgATCtctCATGTTCTCAAAACCTTCTGCGACATTgctagcatat (SEQ ID NO:26) 4 catatagatctATGTCCGTTTATGGcAAGATCCCTAGCACTTCTTTTGAGCATGA SpTPP1 GAATACATTCGAGCTCTCTGGCGACCTCTTGGACCCGGAGGAACTGAAGT CTCTTGGAGTCTCCGGaAGaATTATCTATGTCCTGCGCCACCTTCCgTTTAA AAGctcgATTAATGAAGAGACGCGAGAATGGGATCTTTCCGGACGACGGGG CGCTACTACTATGTACtcgTCCATGAACTGGTTGGCCAATAGCACGTATTGG CAGACCACACTGGTCGGCTGGACCGGGGTTATTCCGACCGTTTCTGAGAA GGAGGAGAATAAGGATGCGGTTACCAGATTGGACtcgCAAGACGTGAAGC GCTTCGAAGAAACATATTCCCAATGGAACtctGGGGAAcgcAGcACAGAGTAT GTGCCtGTGTGGCTGCCTGGGCCGGAAAAAGGcAGCGAAACCATCATTAA CGAAACCAGATCCCAGCAGTCTCGCTGGCTCGCGTACGCAGAAAATGTTA TCcgaCCCCTTATTCACTATAAGTATTGGCCGTCTAGCGAGGTGGACGAGA ATGAGGAGCAATGGTGGCGGGATTACGTTAAGATGAATCACGCTTTCGCT GATAAAATTTGTGAAATCTATAAGCCGGGAGACTTTATTATCGTTCAAGACT ACAGCCTGTTCCTGGTTCCGCAGCTGATCAGAAATAAAATTGACGACGCA GTTATTGGGTTCTATCATCATCACCCgTTTCCGTCCTCCGAAATCGCTCGA TGCTTCCCCCGGCGCagaGCAATTCTGCGATCGGTTCTCGGAGCGGATTTT ATCGGGTTTGAAGACTATtctTATGCAcgcCATTTTATTTCCTGCTGTTCCCGT GTTCTGGACTTGGAGATCGGGCACGATTGGGTGAATCTGAATGGcAATAA GGTGACTGTGAGaGCAATTACAGTGGGCATTGACGTTCCCCGCATTATCC GTAGCAGCGGGAATGTTtcgGTCTCCGAGAAATTGGAAGAGCTTAATAAAC GGTATGAGAACATGAAGGTGATCCTTGGCAGAGATCGGCTCGACGAGCTG TATGGgGTCCCtCAGAAACTTAGATCGTTTCAGCGCTTTTTGCGaACGTACC CgGAGTGGCGAAAAAAGGTTGTGCTCATTCAGATCACGATCTCCTCTGCCT TTAAGCATCCtAAGCTTCTCAGcAGCATCAAGAAGCTCGTGCAAGCAATCAA CCAAGAGTTCGGGACGGACGACTACACTCCCGTTCACCATGTGGAAGAGC AACTGGAACCGGCAGACTATTTCGCCCTTTTGACCAGaGCCGATGCTTTGT TTATCAATTCGATCCGAGAGGGcGTCTCTAATCTTGCCCTTGAATACGTGG TTTGCCAGCGAGATCGCTATGGTATGGTCTTGCTCTCGGAATTTACGGCC ACAAGCGCCATGTTGCACGACGTTCCTCTGATCAATCCgTGGGATTATAAC GAATGT (SEQ ID NO:27) 5 CCgTGGGATTATAACGAATGTGCTGAAATCATTTCTAATGCACTTTCCACCC SpTPP1 CtCTGGAACGcCGCAAGATGATTGAACGCGAGtcgTATAAGCAAGTCACTAC ACACACGATGCAATCTTGGACCagcTCTCTGATCCGATCTCTCGCCAACAA GCTTGCCGCTACTAAAACTGACCAAAGAATCCCtACTCTGACGCCgGAACA CGCTCTGTCGGTCTACTCCAAGGCGTCTAAGCGaCTGTTTATGATGGACTA TGATGGaACGTTGACCCCGATCGTCCGcGATCCTAATGCTGCGGTCCCTtc gAAGAAACTTCTGGATAATCTGGCAACACTTGCCGCCGACCCCAAAAATCA GGTGTGGATTATCTCGGGCCGAGATCAACAGTTCCTGCGAAATTGGATGG ACGATATCAAGGGACTCGGGTTGTCTGCTGAGCATGGCTCGTTCGTTCGA AAGCCgCATTCCACAACGTGGATTAATCTTGCAGAGCTGCTGGATATGTCG TGGAAGAAGGAGGTTCGACGAATCTTCCAGTATTATACAGACCGCACCCA GGGGTCTAGCATCGAAGAGAAACGcTGTGCGATGACGTGGCATTACAGaA AAGCTGACCCCGAAAACGGAGCATTCCAGGCACTTGAGTGTGAAGCCCTT CTCGAGGAACTGGTCTGTAGCAAGTACGATGTCGAAATCATGCGaGGAAA AGCGAATCTCGAAGTCAGACCCtctAGcATCAATAAAGGaGGCATTGTCAAG CAAATCTTGTCCAGCTATCCTGAGGACAGCCTGCCCTCGTTCATTTTCTGC GCAGGCGACGACcgcACGGACGAGGACATGTTTCGGTCCCTTCATAAAAAT ACGCGGATTAATAAGGAAACATCCTTTGCTGTCACGATCGGCtcgGACAAG AAGCTGTCCATCGCAGACTGGTGCATCGCCGATCCCGCAAATGTTATTGA TATCCTGGCAGACCTGGCCAATTTCACCAACgctagcatat (SEQ ID NO:28) 6 tataagatctATGACTACGGAcAACGCTAAaGCGCAgCTGACCTCGTCTTCtGGa SCTPS1 GGcAACATTATaGTGGTGTCgAACcgcCTTCCCGTGACAATCACTAAAAACA GCAGcACGGGACAGTACGAGTAtGCgATGTCGTCCGGAGGcCTGGTCACG GCGctcGAAGGGcTGAAGAAaACGTACACgTTCAAGTGGTTCGGATGGCCT GGGCTtGAGATTCCgGACGATGAGAAGGAcCAGGTGcgcAAGGACcTtCTGG AgAAGTTTAATGCCGTcCCCATCTTtCTGAGCGATGAAATCGCAGACctcCAC TACAACGGGTTCAGcAATTCTATTCTcTGGCCGctcTTCCATTACCATCCTGG cGAGATCAATTTtGACGAGAATGCGTGGTTGGCATACAACGAGGCAAACCA GACGTTCACCAACGAGATTGCTAAGACgATGAACCAcAACGAccttATCTGG GTGCATGAcTACCAcctcATGctcGTTCCGGAgATGCTGcgcGTCAAGATTCAC GAGAAGCAACTGCAgAACGTTAAGGTCGGcTGGTTCCTGCACACgCCgTTtC CTTCGAGcGAgATTTACAGAATCcttCCgGTCcgcCAAGAGATTTTGAAGGGaG TcctctcgTGTGATctcGTCGGGTTCCACACATAtGAcTATGCgAGACAcTTCTTG TCTTCCGTcCAgcGAGTGCTTAACGTGAACACActcCCgAATGGGGTGGAAT ACCAGGGCAGATTCGTTAACGTcGGGGCCTTtCCTATCGGcATCGACGTGG ACAAGTTCACCGATGGGTTGAAAAAGGAATCCGTcCAAAAGAGAATCCAAC AgcttAAGGAAACTTTCAAaGGCTGCAAGATCATAGTTGGaGTCGACcGGCT GGAcTACATCAAAGGcGTGCCTCAGAAGTTGCACGCtATGGAgGTGTTTCT GAAtGAGCATCCAGAATGGcgaGGCAAaGTTGTTCTGGTcCAGGTTGCAGTG CCAtctCGcGGAGATGTGGAAGAGTACCAATATctccGATCTGTGGTCAATGA GctcGTCGGacGAATCAACGGcCAGTTCGGcACTGTGGAATTtGTCCCCATCC ATTTCATGCACAAGTCTATACCATTTGAAGAGCTGATTTCGCTcTATGCCGT GAGCGAcGTCTGCcttGTCTCGTCCACTCGgGAcGGcATGAACTTGGTTTCCT ACGAATATATTGCTTGCCAAGAAGAgAAGAAAGGcTCCctcATCCTGtctGAGT TtACAGGTGCCGCACAgTCCTTGAATGGTGCgATTATTGTcAATCCTTGGAA CACCGAcGATCTTTCTGATGCgATCAACGAGGCCTTGACgTTGCCCGAcGTc AAGAAAGAAGTTAACTGGGAAAAACTTTACAAATACATCTCTAAATACACTT CTGCCTTCTGGGGTGAAAATTTCGTCCAcGAActcTACtctACATCgTCtAGCT CgACAAGCTCCTCTGCgACCAAAAACgctagctata (SEQ ID NO:29) 7 catatagatctATGCTGTACACCAGGGTTTTCTTCCGTGCAGTGGTTCGGACAG TgTPS/TPP ACTTCGGTGAACGAGTCGCCGTCGTCGGGTCTTCCCCGTCTCTGGGGAAT rescue TGGCAGGCTGAACACGGCCATGAGCTGACCACAAACGAGGATGTCTTCCC mutant TTCGTGGTTCTCCAAGGAGCCTGTCTACTTGCCGCTAAAGAAACCCATATC TTACAAATATGTTGTTCTCGACGAACGCGGCGACATCGTGAGGTGGGAAG AATGCGAGGGAAATCGCGAGTTGGTGCCCACGGGCTTGGAGATGACGGT GGAGGATGACGATGGCCTTTTTAGGGAGCAGATGACGAATCGCGGCGAC CACGGAGTCGAAGGCGATGACGACGTGTCTGTGGCGGCTCTGGACAAGG AGGAGGTGGACGCGCGCAACCGGATGCTGGCGATTCAAGAAGAAGAGCC TGAGTTCGACGAGAACGACAGCGTAATTGTGgtcGCTaaccgcTTGCCTCTGC GCGTGGTGCGTGTCTCGCCGTCTCGTGAGGCTTCTCCGCTGCCCTCCTCg CTGCCtGCGTCGTCGACCGACTCTTCCGGCCAAACAGAAAAGCGaGCGGT TTCATTCCCGGAAGACGCGGGaGCGAGTGCaCGGCGCTCGAGTTCGACC GTCGCGGCaACTCGGGAGGAGGAAACGACTCGCACTGCGAGTTCCTTTC CtAAAGTCGAGGAGACGGCGGAaAGAGGACGaGACAGCTCgCTCGCTCTT TGGCCTGGCGCAGCaCGCGACGCTGCCGGCGACTTCGGGGAGGCGCTT CAGCCGagaGCGACcCGCAGCCGACGAGGCACCTTTGAAGTGAGGCCGA GCAAGggcggaTTGcttCCTTCGCTGTTTCACCTGcgcAAGAAGACGCGGCTG CCTGTGCGTtggGTCGGGTGGCCGGGaATCCACGTCGAGAACGAAGAGGA GCAGGCGGAGATTGCGGAGCTGCTGCGAGCCTACGACTGTTCGCCGATC TTCctcGACAAAGACGAGTTCGACTGCCATtacaacggcTTCtcgaattctatcCTGTG GCCGCTGTTTCACAACGTCGTCGTCCTTGACTCCAATACCCAGGTCCCGT TCGACTCCGACCTCTGGGCCAAGTACCAGGCTGTGAACAAACTGTGGGC GGACGCGGTGCTCCGCCAGGCGCACGAAACCGACATGGTCTGGGTCCAC GACTACCACCTGCTCCTCGCGCCCATGCACctccgcCGGAAAGTCCGACGC GCCAACGTCGGCTTCTTTCTTCACATCCCCTTCCCCTCTTCCGAAATCTTC AGGTGTCTCCCTTGCCGAGAAGACATTTTGCGAGGGgtgCTGTGCGCGGA CTTGATTGGGTTTCACCTCTTCGAGTACGCGCGCCACTTTCTGGTCGCAT GCAAGCGGCTGCTCGGCCTCGAGCACCATTTTTGTCGAGGGGGCATTCT GAACATCGAGTACGGCGGCCGCAACGTCTCGGTCCGCATCGGCcctatcggc ATTgacTACGCCGACATTCGCTCGAAAATCGAGGCAAACCCGGTGGTTCTG CAGATGGCGCGAGACATCAGACAAAAACACGTCGGAAAATTCATCTTCGT CTCCGTGGACcgcctggacatgatcaagGGTCTCCTCCTCAAAGTTCGCGCCTTC CAGGCGTTTCTCGTGACCTACTCTTATGCCAGGGGAAATGTCGTCCTCATT CAGTACGCGTATCCT (SEQ ID NO:30) 8 CGTCCTCATTCAGTACGCGTATCCTACCcgcacggaCgtccctgagtaccagaagctca TgTPS/TPP aatctcaggtgcacGAGCTCGTGggcagaatcAATggaCAGTTCggcTTGgtcGATCGC rescue CCAGATTTCCAACATATCGAACTCCACATCCAGCCGGTCGGCTGGGAGGA mutant GctcTGGGCGTTGTTTACCGCGGGCGACgttatgCTTgtgACATCGATCCGAGA TGGCatgAATCTCgtctcgtacGAATTTATCTGTTGCCACAAAGACAACGTCACC GGTGTGATTTTATCAGAGTTCACGGGGTGCAGCAGAGCCCTCGCCTCGGC CATTCGCGTCAATCCTTGGAAGGTGGAGGCGGTGGCAGATGCGATGGAC AGAATCATCAACATGCCTGTGGAGGAGCAGCGCGACCGGTTCACCCGCG ACCGCGACTACTTGAGTCACAACAGTACGCAGAAGTGGGCAGACGAAAAC ATTCTGGATCTGCGACGAGCCCGGAAACCAGACGACTTCGTCTACGTCTC TTGGGGTCTCGGCAACACCTTCCGCGTCCTAGGCATGGACTCCAACTTCC GGTTTCTGGACACAAATCAAGTGGTGCGAGGCTACCGAACTTCTCGACAT CGCGTCTTCTTCTTCGACtacgacGGCACACTCtctCCGatcGTAgaggacccggatA ATCTTTTTGCGCAAGGTCGCCCGCCTTCGCCGCAAGTCAAGGACTGTCTC CAGGCGCTTGTCGACGACCAAAGAAACACTGTTGTCATTCTCTCGGGACG CGACAGACACCTCCTAGAGGAATGGTTCTCTTCCATCAGAGGCATTGGAC TTTGTGCCGAACACGGTTTTTACTACCGGGTTCCGGGCATCACGGGGGAC CAGTGGCACTGCATGTCTCGTCAAACAGACTTCACATGGAAGCAAGTGGC GATCGAGCTGATGCTGCAGTATGTGAAGCGAACTCAGGGCTCATTCATCG AAAACAAAGGAAGTGCTCTCGTCTTCCAGTACCGCGACGCAGATCCGGAT TTCGGCAGCATGCAAGCCAAGGATCTCTCGAACTACCTCGGGGAACTGCT CTTCGGCTATCCTGTCTCGGTCATGAGCGGGAAAGGCTACGTGGAAGTGA AACTGCGAGGTGTCAACAAAGGGCATGCAGTCGAGAAAGTTCTGCGGAAA CTCAGCAACCTCCACGGAGACGTCGACTTCGTTCTCTGCGTCGGAGATGA CAGAacgGACGAAGACATGTTCGCGGTCATCAACGCCATGACGGAAGACG GGGACCAGCTGTGCCTGCCAGAGGGCAGCGGCGCCGGGAGCAGCGGCC TCTATCGCCACACACAGTCGAAGGATCGAATTCCTAGACGCAACTCTGTCT CTTCGGATGAGAACCGAGCAGAAGCTGTCGTTGGAAACGTGGAGGGACT CATGAAGCGTGACGGGTCGATGCAGCATGCGGGGGCGCTCGGCAGCGG CTTGACCTCTGCGTCTTCCAGCACAAGTCTCAGTGGGCACACAAAGAAAA CGAGTCCTCACTTTTTCACATGCACAGTCGGCAAGAAGCCGTCCAACGCT CGGTATTACCTCAACGACACTGAGGATGTCTCCGATCTCCTCGACTCTCTG CAGCAGTGCACTGAGAAGGACGGGAAGGAGCAGTGGAGTTCGTCGAAGG ACGCGAGTTGCCTCTCGGCGCCAGTCGTGGCaGCtGCaGCtGCTGCGGGa TCGCTCGCGGGGAACGCGGCGGTGCAGCTGAGGAAAGGCGACAGCGCA GCTTCGAACTTTGCGAGTCTGTGGAGATCGCCTCTGGGATCAGGAGCAGG TCGCACGAGAGAACGAACGCTCGCGCAGTGGGCGGGGCAGGCACCGAG CGCCATCTTCAGTCGCCCCGTCGGTGCCGTTGAAGTTCGCGCCAACGCA GCTGGCAGCACAGATCGCCCAACAGACGAGgctagcatat (SEQ ID NO:31) 9 catatagatctATGCTGTACACCAGGGTTTTCTTCCGTGCAGTGGTTCGGACAG TgCBM20 ACTTCGGTGAACGAGTCGCCGTCGTCGGGTCTTCCCCGTCTCTGGGGAAT mutant ctcCAGGCTGAACACGGCCATGAGCTGACCACAAACGAGGATGTCgcgCCTT CGTGGTTCTCCAAGGAGCCTGTCTACTTGCCGCTAAAGAAACCCATATCTT ACAAATATGTTGTTCTCGACGAACGCGGCGACATCGTGAGGctGGAAGAAT GCGAGGGAAATCGCGAGTTGGTGCCCACGGGCTTGGAGATGACGGTGGA GGATGACGATGGCCTTTTTAGGGAGCAGATGACGAATCGCGGCGACCAC GGAGTCGAAGGCGATGACGACGTGTCTGTGGCGGCTCTGGACAAGGAGG AGGTGGACGCGCGCAACCGGATGCTGGCGATTCAAGAAGAAGAGCCTGA GTTCGACGAGAACGACAGCGTAATTGTGTGTGCTCTTGACTTGCCTCTGC GCGTGGTGCGTGTCTCGCCGTCTCGTGAGGCTTCTCCGCTGCCCTCCTCg CTGCCtGCGTCGTCGACCGACTCTTCCGGCCAAACAGAAAAGCGaGCGGT TTCATTCCCGGAAGACGCGGGaGCGAGTGCaCGGCGCTCGAGTTCGACC GTCGCGGCaACTCGGGAGGAGGAAACGACTCGCACTGCGAGTTCCTTTC CtAAAGTCGAGGAGACGGCGGAaAGAGGACGaGACAGCTCgCTCGCTCTT TGGCCTGGCGCAGCaCGCGACGCTGCCGGCGACTTCGGGGAGGCGCTT CAGCCGagaGCGACcCGCAGCCGACGAGGCACCTTTGAAGTGAGGCCGA GCAAGAGCGCGTTGcttCCTTCGCTGTTTCACCTGcgcAAGAAGACGCGGCT GCCTGTGCGTTTCGTCGGGTGGCCGGGaATCCACGTCGAGAACGAAGAG GAGCAGGCGGAGATTGCGGAGCTGCTGCGAGCCTACGACTGTTCGCCGA TCTTCCCAGACAAAGACGAGTTCGACTGCCATCTCACCTTCTGCCATCAG GTCCTGTGGCCGCTGTTTCACAACGTCGTCGTCCTTGACTCCAATACCCA GGTCCCGTTCGACTCCGACCTCTGGGCCAAGTACCAGGCTGTGAACAAAC TGTGGGCGGACGCGGTGCTCCGCCAGGCGCACGAAACCGACATGGTCTG GGTCCACGACTACCACCTGCTCCTCGCGCCCATGCACATTACGCGGAAAG TCCGACGCGCCAACGTCGGCTTCTTTCTTCACATCCCCTTCCCCTCTTCCG AAATCTTCAGGTGTCTCCCTTGCCGAGAAGACATTTTGCGAGGGATGCTG TGCGCGGACTTGATTGGGTTTCACCTCTTCGAGTACGCGCGCCACTTTCT GGTCGCATGCAAGCGGCTGCTCGGCCTCGAGCACCATTTTTGTCGAGGG GGCATTCTGAACATCGAGTACGGCGGCCGCAACGTCTCGGTCCGCATCG GCCATGTCCACATTCAGTACGCCGACATTCGCTCGAAAATCGAGGCAAAC CCGGTGGTTCTGCAGATGGCGCGAGACATCAGACAAAAACACGTCGGAAA ATTCATCTTCGTCTCCGTGGACCGCTGCGAGAAATTGGCCGGTCTCCTCC TCAAAGTTCGCGCCTTCCAGGCGTTTCTCGTGACCTACTCTTATGCCAGG GGAAATGTCGTCCTCATTCAGTACGCGTATCCTACCATCAAATACGCAGAA GACACAGAAACCATGGCGACGGAACTCAAAGAGCTCGTGGA (SEQ ID NO:32) 10 CTCTCAGGTGGGCAGTGGCGTCGGTTTCTTCTCTCTTCATTCTCTTGTCGC TgWDK CTGCGAAGTCGCGCTGCGTGTCTGCAGCTCGCGTTTCTTGTCGAGGATAA 3xMyc ATACGCGGTGCCCCAAGACATCGAAGGAGTCGTCGTCGGtGCgGAgACtGT tagging TGCCCTgGTcCAgACGCGtACGCAgGTCCCTAGGGAACAAAAGTTGATTTCT GAAGAAGATTTGAACGGTGAACAAAAGCTAATCTCCGAGGAAGACTTGAA CGGTGCTAGGGCCGAGGAGCAGAAGCTGATCTCCGAGGAGGACCTGTGA gcacacagcatcgtcttgacgcgtctcgacctcgctctcgcgactcacttct ccggagagacggaaaaacggtgcgagtcaagaactcaggagaccccgaatcc gcagcttctacacatcacggttcaggccggtca (SEQ ID NO:33)
The amplified gBlocks were digested with Bgl II/Sac I (gBlock 1) or Sac I/Nhe I (gBlock2) and ligated to pHTU-3HA via these sites. To create a complementation construct containing the PtHAD1 protein, codon-optimized gBlock 3 was amplified using oligonucleotides 13 and 14, digested with Bgl II and Nhe I, and ligated to pHTU-3HA. Similarly, to create a construct for complementation with SpTPP1, codon optimized gBlocks 4 and 5 were amplified with oligonucleotides 15 and 16, and 17 and 18, respectively, digested with Bgl II/Psi I (gBlock 4) and Psi I/Nhe I (gBlock 5) and ligated to pHTU-3HA. To create a complementation construct containing only the TgTPS domain, but lacking the TgTPP domain, oligonucleotides 9 and 19 were used to amplify the TPS domain using the pHTU-TgTPS/TPP-3HA complementation construct as DNA template. The TgTPS domain was inserted into pHTU-3HA via Bgl II and Nhe I sites. Constructs that contained the TgTPS domain fused to either the PtHAD1 or SpTPP1 domains were also created. For the TgTPS-PfHAD1 construct, the PtHAD1 domain was amplified from gBlock 3 using oligonucleotides 14 and 20 and digested with Nhe I, while the TgTPS domain was amplified using oligonucleotide 21 and either oligonucleotide 22 or 23 (to create different linker sequences) and digested with Bgl II. SpTPP1 was amplified from pHTU-SpTPP1-3HA template DNA with oligonucleotides 18 and 24 and digested with Nhe I for fusion to the TgTPS domain, as above. To create a construct for complementation with ScTPS1, codon-optimized gBlock 6 was amplified with oligonucleotides 25 and 26, digested with Bgl II and Nhe I and ligated to pHTU-3HA via these sites. To create a construct for complementation with the TgCBM20 domain fused to the ScTPS1 domain, the TgCBM20 domain was amplified with oligonucleotide 27 and either oligonucleotide 28 or 29 (to create either a rigid or flexible linker between the domains) and digested with Bgl II. The ScTPS1 gBlock 6 was amplified using oligonucleotides 26 and 30, and digested with Nhe I. The two products were ligated to pHTU-3HA via these sites. To create a complementation construct of TgTPS/TPP that has missing substrate binding residues reintroduced (and therefore hypothetically capable of producing the reaction product T6P), gBlock 7 was amplified using the oligonucleotides 9 and 31 and gBlock 8 was amplified using the oligonucleotides 12 and 32. The gBlocks were digested with Bgl II/Mlu I (gBlock 7) and Mlu I/Nhe I (gBlock 8) and ligated to pHTU-3HA via Bgl II and Nhe I sites. To create a complementation construct that has lost the ability to bind to amylopectin, gBlock 9 (containing mutations in 3 important starch binding residues) was amplified using oligonucleotides 9 and 10, digested with Bgl II/Sac I and ligated to Sac I/Nhe I-digested gBlock 2 and Bgl II/Nhe I digested pHTU-3HA. To create a construct for complementation of RH:Δku80:Δhxgprt:Hxk-HA:Δtps/tpp parasites, Bgl II/Sac I-digested gBlock 1 and Sacl/Nhe I-digested gBlock 2 were ligated to Bgl II/Avr II-digested pHTU-3MYC (created in-house).
(197) To tag the C-terminus of TgTPS/TPP with a triple-Myc epitope tag, the 3′ regions of the gene were amplified using oligonucleotides 33 and 34, and inserted into pgCM3 via Bgl II and Avr II restriction sites. The construct was linearized with Sfo I for transfection into RH:Δku80:DHFR, RH:Δku80:Δhxgprt:Hxk-HA and RH:Δku80:DHFR:Δcdpk2 parasites, and drug selected with chloramphenicol. To make a Myc-tagged construct that can be selected by mycophenolic acid/xanthine, the TPS/TPP fragment was cut from the pgCM3-TPS/TPP-3MYC construct above with Spe I and ligated to pHTU-3HA vector backbone digested with Spe I and Nhe I. The resulting pHTU-TgTPS/TPP-3xMyc construct was digested with Aar II and 10 μg was transfected into RH:Δku80:Δhxgprt:Hxk-HA parasites to produce a RH:Δku80:Δhxgprt:Hxk-HA:TPS/TPP-3Myc line.
(198) TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 3 Oligonucleotides Oligo # Oligo sequence (5′ .fwdarw. 3′) Description 9 CATATAGATCTATGCTGTACACCAGGGTTTTCTTC TgTPS/TPP gBlock1- (SEQ ID NO:34) Forward 10 TCCACGAGCTCTTTGAGTTCCGTC TgTPS/TPP gBlock1- (SEQ ID NO:35) Reverse 11 CTCAAAGAGCTCGTGGAGAAAGTCAATGC TgTPS/TPP gBlock2- (SEQ ID NO:36) Forward 12 ATATGCTAGCCTCGTCTGTTGGGCGATC TgTPS/TPP gBlock2- (SEQ ID NO:37) Reverse 13 CATATAGATCTATGCACGAGATCGTCGACAAG PfHAD1 gBlock- (SEQ ID NO:38) Forward 14 ATATGCTAGCAATGTCGCAGAAGGTTTTGAG PfHAD1 gBlock- (SEQ ID NO:39) Reverse 15 CATATAGATCTATGTCCGTTTATGGCAAGATC SpTPP1 gBlock1- (SEQ ID NO:40) Forward 16 ACATTCGTTATAATCCCACGGATTGATC SpTPP1 gBlock1- (SEQ ID NO:41) Reverse 17 CCGTGGGATTATAACGAATGTGCTGAAATC SpTPP1 gBlock2- (SEQ ID NO:42) Forward 18 ATATGCTAGCGTTGGTGAAATTGGCCAG SpTPP1 gBlock2- (SEQ ID NO:43) Reverse 19 ATATGCTAGCGAGACAGTCCTTGACTTGC TgTPS only-Reverse (SEQ ID NO:44) 20 CACGAGATCGTCGACAAGAACGGAAAG PfHAD1 fusion- (SEQ ID NO:45) Forward 21 GCATATAGATCTATGCTGTACACCAGG TgTPS linker-Forward (SEQ ID NO:46) 22 AGGCGGGCGACCTTGC (SEQ ID NO:47) TgTPS linker-R-short 23 CTTGACTTGCGGCGAAGG (SEQ ID NO:48) TgTPS linker-R-long 24 TCCGTTTATGGCAAGATCCCTAGCACTTC SpTPP1 fusion- (SEQ ID NO:49) Forward 25 TATAAGATCTATGACTACGGACAACGCTAAAGC ScTPS1-gBlock- (SEQ ID NO:50) Forward 26 TATAGCTAGCGTTTTTGGTCGCAGAGG ScTPS1-gBlock- (SEQ ID NO:51) Reverse 27 TATAAGATCTATGCTGTACACCAGGGTTTTCTTCCGTGC TgCBM20-BgIII- (SEQ ID NO:52) Forward 28 CGGAGGCCTGCCCTGCTCCCTAAAAAG TgCBM20-QGRPP- (SEQ ID NO:53) Reverse 29 TCCCGAGCCTCCGCGATTCGTCATC TgCBM20-GGSG- (SEQ ID NO:54) Reverse 30 ACTACGGACAACGCTAAAGCGCAGCTGACC ScTPS1 fusion- (SEQ ID NO:55) Forward 31 AGGATACGCGTACTGAATGAGGACGAC TgTPS/TPP gBlock1- (SEQ ID NO:56) R-Mlul 32 CGTCCTCATTCAGTACGCGTATCCTACC TgTPS/TPP gBlock2- (SEQ ID NO:57) F-Mlul 33 TGATAGATCTTGTGCAGAAGGTGCTCCAC TgTPS/TPP 3xMyc (SEQ ID NO:58) Ct- tagging-F 34 TATACCTAGGCTCGTCTGTTGGGCGATC TgTPS/TPP 3xMyc (SEQ ID NO:59) Ct- tagging-F 35 CTCTCAGGTGGGCAGTGGCGTC (SEQ ID NO:60) TgWDK3x Myc-F 36 TGACCGGCCTGAACCGTGATG (SEQ ID NO:61) TgWDK3x Myc-R 37 GAGTCGTCGTGTTTTAGAGCTAGAAATAGCAAG TgWDK 3Myc (SEQ ID NO:62) protospacer-F 38 CTTCGATGTCAACTTGACATCCCCATTTAC TgWDK 3Myc (SEQ ID NO:63) protospacer-F
Cyst Assays
(199) Pru:tdTomato:Wt and Pru:TdTomato: Δtps/tpp parasites that had been maintained in glucose-free D1 medium were added to monolayers of humanforeskin fibroblasts (HFF) on coverslips in 6-well plates (Corning) at an M.O.I. of 1 parasite per 5 host cells. The parasites were spun onto the HFFs by centrifugation at 1400 rpm for 3 min and incubated in a humidified atmosphere of 10% CO.sub.2 for 4 hours at 37° C. to allow attachment and invasion to occur. The glucose-free D1 medium was removed and replaced with bradyzoite-inducing medium (RPMI-Hepes, pH 8.1; 5% FBS), which was changed every second day of differentiation. Modified IFAs combining antibody staining and PAS staining were performed as described in Sugi T et al., (2017) mBio 8, e01289-17.
(200) ATPS/TPP Immunization
(201) ΔTPS/TPP tachyzoites were prepared from tissue culture and resuspended at 1×10.sup.4/200 ul of PBS. 6×Wildtype C57BL/6 were infected intraperiotoneally (i.p) with 1×10.sup.4 tachyzoites and actively monitored over 3 weeks.
(202) Challenge with Wildtype Parasites
(203) Pru:tdTomato:Δhx strain (type II) Toxoplasma strain was harvested from tissue culture resuspended in PBS at 1×10.sup.4/200 ul of PBS. Six naive and 6×Δtps/tpp immunized animals were then injected i.p with 1×10.sup.4Pru:tdTomato:Δhx strain and monitored daily for body weight and signs of infection.
Example 1 Disruption of the Toxoplasma Aondii (Ta) TPS/TPP-Like Ciene Results in Massive Accumulation of Amylopectin within Toxoplasma Tachyzoites
(204) To investigate the function of the TPS/TPP-like protein, the inventors created a gene disruption in hypervirulent type I (RH) tachyzoites and less virulent cyst forming Prugniaud (type II) strain. Genetic ablation of TgTPS/TPP in RH and tdTomato expressing P-strain was confirmed by PCR and sequencing.
(205) Following gene disruption, massive amylopectin granules, as detected by Periodic-acid-Schiff (PAS) staining, were visible within the residual body and within the tachyzoites themselves (
(206) The inventors then assessed growth capacity through the lytic cycle by performing plaque assays on confluent human foreskin fibroblasts. Strikingly, the growth of RH:Δtgtps/tpp tachyzoites in fibroblasts was severely attenuated when host cells were cultivated in standard high glucose medium (
Example 2 Disruption of TPS/TPP Leads to a Decrease in Virulence In Vivo
(207) To investigate whether the TPS/TPP-like gene is required for acute infection in animal models, C57BL/6 mice were infected with the parental Pru:tdTomato and Pru:Δtps/tpp parasites (see mutant
(208) Microscopic examination of brain tissues indicated the absence of cysts in these mice. TgTPS/TPP is thus essential for growth of both acute phase tachyzoites and chronic bradyzoites in infected tissues. The results also suggest that both stages are normally exposed to high glucose concentrations in vivo.
Example 3 Loss of TgTPS/TPP is Associated with Defects in Central Carbon Metabolism
(209) T. gondii tachyzoites catabolize glucose via a number of pathways, including glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway, and also channel excess glucose into synthesis of the major storage carbohydrate, amylopectin (Uboldi A. D et al., (2015) Cell Host Microbe 18,670-681). Wild type RH tachyzoites normally have very low levels of amylopectin, as shown by Schiffs Periodate staining of intracellular parasite stages, indicating that most of the glucose taken up these parasites is used for glycolysis. In contrast, RH:Δtgtps/tpp tachyzoites accumulate a large number of Periodate-Schiffs-positive granules (
(210) Metabolite profiling of RH parental and RH:Δtgtps/tpp tachyzoites indicated that loss of TgTPS/TPP was associated with global changes in parasite central carbon metabolism. In particular LC/MS analysis of polar metabolites (resulting in detection of 2,657 m/z features) revealed that the mutant had elevated levels of intermediates in upper glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway (
(211) The inventors next measured rates of glucose uptake in extracellular RH parental and RH:Δtgtps/tpp mutant tachyzoites to investigate whether TgTPS/TPP could be modulating the activity of the plasma membrane glucose transporter. Strikingly, TgTPS/TPP deficient tachyzoites parasites exhibited similar or slightly lower rates of .sup.14C-glucose uptake compared to the parental line (
(212) To determine whether down-stream steps in glucose catabolism were enhanced in the absence of TgTPS/TPP, parental RH and RH:Δtgtps/tpp tachyzoites were metabolically labeled with .sup.13C-glucose and the kinetics of incorporation of .sup.13C into hexose phosphates and other glycolytic intermediates determined by GC/MS. Strikingly, rates of synthesis of glucose-6-phosphate (
(213) LC-MS/MS proteomic analysis of parasite extracts indicated that expression of hexose kinase is not altered in TPS/TPP knockout parasites compared to WT parasites, nor are detectable post-translational modifications. Furthermore, complementary metabolic labeling of extracellular parasites with .sup.13C-glutamine in glucose-rich medium revealed minimal labeling of hexose phosphates in both parental RH and RH:Δtgtps/tpp tachyzoites, indicating that the elevated levels of sugar phosphates in the mutant tachyzoites is not due to increased gluconeogenic flux.
Example 4 Disruption of TgTPS/TPP in Combination with Disruption of Hexokinase Results in Greater Attenuation of Mutant Parasites
(214) To further assess whether increased expression of hexose kinase activity was directly responsible for the severe amylopectin phenotype and loss of viability of the RH:Δtgtps/tpp mutant, an HA-epitope tagged version of T. gondii hexose kinase (TgHexK) was overexpressed in the mutant. Overexpression of hexose kinase in the mutant was associated with a dramatic decrease in parasite proliferation, the formation of very large residual bodies which were full of amylopectin granules within a day of infection and further expansion of this residual body and general loss of parasite integrity by day 7 (
(215) Accumulation of massive amylopectin granules continued unabated, creating morphological aberrations until the parasites died (
(216) Moreover, this severe phenotype was specific for Δtps/tpp:HxK-HA parasites, as by contrast, Δcdpk2:HxK-HA parasites showed only the level of starch accumulation typical for Δcdpk2 parasites (
(217) The catalytic activity of hexokinase was elevated by HA-tagging the C-terminus (
(218) These findings indicate that TgTPS/TPP normally negatively regulates hexokinase activity and that in the absence of TgTPS/TPP, excess glucose-6-phosphate synthesized by hyperactive hexose kinase is diverted into amylopectin synthesis resulting in pathologic accumulation of amylopectin granules.
Example 5 the CBM20 and TPP Domains of TgTPS/TPP are Important for Activity
(219) TgTPS/TPP contains an N-terminal carbohydrate-binding module (CBM20) that is predicted to bind amylopectin and was retained on an amylose column following cell lysis and passage of cytosolic extracts on this column (
(220) Finally, to define which domains of TgTPS/TPP are involved in regulating hexose kinase activity and amylopectin accumulation, the RH:Δtgtps/tpp mutant was complemented with mutated or truncated TgTPS/TPP proteins fused to HA epitopes (Figure not shown). Genes encoding each construct were randomly integrated into chromosomal loci and populations examined by immunofluorescence microscopy (for localization of the protein and presence of amylopectin deposits in an enlarged residual body), Western blotting and GC/MS analysis for trehalose metabolites. Complementation of the knock-out lines with a construct expressing full length TgTPS/TPP fully restored normal morphology of the residual body (not shown). Complementation with a full length TgTPS/TPP protein in which key residues in the CBM20 domain required for amylopectin binding were mutated (TgTPS/TPP-CBMmut) also restored residual body phenotype, but only in cells in which high levels of expression were observed. Loss of CBM function in this construct was confirmed by amylose chromatography. Targeting of TgTPS/TPP to amylopectin granules may therefore facilitate, but not be essential for function. Significantly, expression of a truncated TgTPS/TPP protein lacking the C-terminal phosphatase domain failed to complement the mutant and prevent amylopectin accumulation and swelling of the residual body indicating that this domain is essential for function. To investigate whether other closely related phosphatase domains could substitute for the TPP domain of TgTPS/TPP, the knock-out lines was further complemented with fusion proteins in which the TPP domain of TgTPS/TPP was replaced with the S. pombe trehalose-specific phosphatase TPP1 or the promiscuous Plasmodium falciparum sugar phosphatase NAD1. Neither of these chimeric protein complemented the amylopectin phenotype of the Δtps/tpp parasites. Similarly, complementation of the RHΔtgtps/tpp mutant with Saccharomyces cerevisiae TPS1 (ScTPS1) on its own and as a CBM20 fusion also failed to complement the mutant phenotype. Interesting, the RH:Δtgtps/tpp mutant line expressing ScTPS1 synthesized trehalose-6-phosphate, as determined by GC/MS analysis of whole cell lysates, confirming that these heterologous proteins are active and that trehalose-6-phosphate synthesis alone is not sufficient for the regulatory activity of TgTPS/TPP. Finally, expression of a mutated version of TgTPS/TPP with restored putative substrate-binding residues showed a TgTPS/TPP-like localization pattern but failed to complement the Δtps/tpp phenotype.
Example 6 Bradyzoite Cyst Development is Defective in ΔTps/tpp Parasites
(221) Two days post induction of bradyzoite differentiation, large amylopectin granules were visible in Δtps/tpp parasites, but absent in wild-type (WT) parasites. In addition, the intensity of the bradyzoite surface marker SRS9 was lower for Δtps/tpp parasites compared to WT parasites. Following 7 days of bradyzoite induction, Δtps/tpp cyst morphology was markedly disrupted by excessive amylopectin accumulation. Individual parasites are not discernible by staining with SRS9, which is found in a ring-like pattern around the periphery of the cyst-like structure. In contrast, WT parasites express high levels of SRS9 around the periphery of individual bradyzoites within cysts. The presence of small amylopectin granules characteristic of bradyzoite differentiation were also visible in WT cysts after 7 days. Toxoplasma cyst burden was monitored in the mouse brain using quantitative PCR. The TPS/TPP knockout (Δtps/tpp) was either completely absent or below detectable levels, demonstrating that this mutant is unable to survive as bradyzoites.
Example 7 Immunization Challenge with TPS
(222) The inventors wanted to ascertain whether infection with Δtps/tpp strain (Patent deposit ATCC PTA-125166 corresponding to Pru:tdTomato:Dtps/tpp cl-2 (SEQ ID NO:8) could protect against a subsequent challenge with wildtype parasites thus showing the strains utility as a live attenuated vaccine. To do this the inventors first infected naïve C57BL/6 mice with 1×10.sup.4 Δtps/tpp and waited 5 weeks. They then infected both immunized and naïve animals with 1×10.sup.4 wildtype (Pru:tdTomato:Δhx) tachyzoites i.p, monitoring body weight daily and for signs of disease. It was seen that, as expected, naïve animals underwent a typical course of infection dropping weight from approximately day 5, and succumbing to infection between day 9 and 12 (
(223) However, animals immunized with Δtps/tpp did not drop any weight and 100% of the animals survived the challenge (
(224) Remarks
(225) The inventors show here that the multi-domain protein, TgTPS/TPP, has evolved novel regulatory functions in regulating Toxoplasma gondii central carbon metabolism that are essential for the intracellular growth and survival of both acute and chronic stages of these parasites. While both the TPS and TPP domains of this protein appear to lack detectable catalytic activity, they retain many of the residues needed for hexose-phosphate/sugar nucleotide bindings and may function as intracellular sugar-phosphate sensors. In the presence of high glucose concentrations, as are likely to occur in cultured host cells and in infected tissues, TgTPS/TPP may sense high intracellular glucose-6-phosphate levels and negatively regulate the activity of hexose kinase and glucose-6-phosphate flux into key pathways of central carbon metabolism. While we have been unable to detect direct interactions between TgTPS/TPP and hexose kinase using pull-down or in vivo cross-linked assays, it is possible that these proteins may associate with each other on either amylopectin granules or on the outer membrane of mitochondia. Whether TgTPS protein domains sense other metabolites, as has been proposed in some fungi and plants remains to be investigated. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that T. gondii is highly dependent on post-transcriptional/translational mechanims for regulating central carbon metabolism. This strategy may allow these parasites to rapidly respond to changes in carbon source availability within different cell types or tissue niches and/or to adjust their growth rate to prevailing immune responses.
(226) Deposit Statement
(227) Toxoplasma gondii mutant Pru:tdTomato:TPS/TPP (25 vials) was received by the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) 10801 University Boulevard, Manassas, Va. on 14 Sep. 2018 and assigned patent deposit designation PTA-125166.
(228) Toxoplasma gondii mutant RH:HXGPRT:Ku80:TPS/TPP:HK2HA (25 vials) was received by the American Type Culture Collection 10801 University Boulevard, Manassas, Va. on 14 Sep. 2018 and assigned patent deposit designation PTA-125164.
(229) Toxoplasma gondii mutant RH:HXGPRT:TPS/TPP (25 vials) was received by the American Type Culture Collection 10801 University Boulevard, Manassas, Va. on 14 Sep. 2018 and assigned patent deposit designation PTA-125165.
(230) The deposits will be made available in accordance with the requirements under the Budapest Treaty. However, it should be understood that the availability of a deposit does not constitute a license to practice the subject invention in derogation of patent rights granted by governmental action. Further, the subject culture deposits will be stored and made available to the public in accordance with the provisions of the Budapest Treaty for the Deposit of Microorgansim i.e. they will be stored with all the care necessary to keep them viable and uncontaminated for a period of at least five years after the most recent request for furnishing of a sample of the desposits, and in any case, for a period of at least 30 (thirty) years after the date of deposit or for the enforceable life of any patent which may issue disclosing the cultures pus five years after the last request for a sample from the deposit. The depositor acknowledges the duty to replace the deposit should the depository be unable to furnish a sample when requested, due to the condition of the deposits.