Toxoplasma gondii infection-induced host cellular DNA damage is strain-dependent and leads to the activation of the ATM-dependent homologous recombination pathway

Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2024 Mar 8:14:1374659. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2024.1374659. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Toxoplasma gondii is a globally occurring apicomplexan parasite that infects humans and animals. Globally, different typical and atypical haplotypes of T. gondii induce varying pathologies in hosts. As an obligate intracellular protozoon, T. gondii was shown to interfere with host cell cycle progression, leading to mitotic spindle alteration, chromosome segregation errors and cytokinesis failure which all may reflect chromosomal instability. Referring to strain-dependent virulence, we here studied the potential of different T. gondii strains (RH, Me49 and NED) to drive DNA damage in primary endothelial host cells. Utilizing microscopic analyses, comet assays and γ-H2AX quantification, we demonstrated a strain-dependent induction of binucleated host cells, DNA damage and DNA double strand breaks, respectively, in T. gondii-infected cells with the RH strain driving the most prominent effects. Interestingly, only the NED strain significantly triggered micronuclei formation in T. gondii-infected cells. Focusing on the RH strain, we furthermore demonstrated that T. gondii-infected primary host cells showed a DNA damage response by activating the ATM-dependent homologous recombination (HR) pathway. In contrast, key molecules of the nonhomologous DNA end joining (NHEJ) pathway were either not affected or downregulated in RH-infected host cells, suggesting that this pathway is not activated by infection. In conclusion, current finding suggests that T. gondii infection affects the host cell genome integrity in a strain-dependent manner by causing DNA damage and chromosomal instability.

Keywords: DNA damage; DNA repair pathways; Toxoplasma gondii; chromosome instability; double-stranded DNA breaks; micronuclei.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins / genetics
  • Chromosomal Instability
  • DNA
  • DNA Damage
  • Homologous Recombination
  • Humans
  • Toxoplasma*
  • Toxoplasmosis* / parasitology

Substances

  • DNA
  • ATM protein, human
  • Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that no financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.