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Differential Induction of TLR3-Dependent Innate Immune Signaling by Closely Related Parasite Species

  • Daniel P. Beiting ,

    beiting@vet.upenn.edu

    Current address: Department of Pathobiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

    Affiliation Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

  • Lucia Peixoto,

    Affiliation Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

  • Natalia S. Akopyants,

    Affiliation Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America

  • Stephen M. Beverley,

    Affiliation Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America

  • E. John Wherry,

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

  • David A. Christian,

    Affiliation Department of Pathobiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

  • Christopher A. Hunter,

    Affiliation Department of Pathobiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

  • Igor E. Brodsky,

    Affiliation Department of Pathobiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

  • David S. Roos

    Affiliation Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

Abstract

The closely related protozoan parasites Toxoplasma gondii and Neospora caninum display similar life cycles, subcellular ultrastructure, invasion mechanisms, metabolic pathways, and genome organization, but differ in their host range and disease pathogenesis. Type II (γ) interferon has long been known to be the major mediator of innate and adaptive immunity to Toxoplasma infection, but genome-wide expression profiling of infected host cells indicates that Neospora is a potent activator of the type I (α/β) interferon pathways typically associated with antiviral responses. Infection of macrophages from mice with targeted deletions in various innate sensing genes demonstrates that host responses to Neospora are dependent on the toll-like receptor Tlr3 and the adapter protein Trif. Consistent with this observation, RNA from Neospora elicits TLR3-dependent type I interferon responses when targeted to the host endo-lysosomal system. Although live Toxoplasma fail to induce type I interferon, heat-killed parasites do trigger this response, albeit much weaker than Neospora, and co-infection studies reveal that T. gondii actively suppresses the production of type I interferon. These findings reveal that eukaryotic pathogens can be potent inducers of type I interferon and that related parasite species interact with this pathway in distinct ways.

Introduction

The eukaryotic phylum apicomplexa is comprised of over 5000 species of parasitic protozoa that infect a wide range of animal hosts and cause significant disease in both healthy and immune-compromised individuals. This phylum includes Plasmodium, the causative agent of malaria; Cryptosporidium, recently recognized to be a leading cause of pediatric diarrheal disease in the developing world [1]; and Toxoplasma, a ubiquitous parasite that causes potentially fatal congenital disease and represents the second leading cause of food borne mortality in the USA [2]. Other apicomplexa, including Babesia, Neospora and Theileria are important pathogens of cattle, while Eimeria species are a leading concern in the poultry industry. Despite being important causes of human and animal disease worldwide, there is relatively little information about how these pathogens are recognized by the host innate immune system following invasion of target cells, nor is it known whether infections with distinct protozoa trigger identical, partially overlapping or completely distinct innate immune responses.

The profound susceptibility of IFN-γ-deficient mice to a wide range of protozoan parasites, including Toxoplasma gondii [3], [4], Cryptosporidium parvum [5], Leishmania major [6] and Trypanosoma cruzi [7], has given rise to the widely-held view that type II interferon (IFN-γ) is responsible for controlling protozoan infections, in contrast to type I interferons (IFN-α/β) which are primarily associated with control of viral infections. As a consequence, the vast majority of studies on innate immunity to protozoan parasites have focused on IFN-γ produced during acute infection by NK cells [8], [9], and interleukin-12 produced by macrophages [10], neutrophils [11], [12] and dendritic cells [13]. It is unclear whether this accurately captures the complete picture of innate immune pathways triggered by infection with protozoa. Moreover, while tremendous progress has been made in identifying viral and bacterial ligands recognized by innate pattern recognition receptors [14], relatively few studies have explored the mechanisms and consequences of innate recognition of intracellular eukaryotic microbes [15], in part because the conserved signatures of bacteria and viruses are not generally thought to be present in eukaryotic cells.

We have employed a comparative genomic approach to investigate innate immune signaling triggered by two closely related but distinct apicomplexan species, Toxoplasma gondii and Neospora caninum, both of which are obligate intracellular parasites that initiate infection in the gastrointestinal tract of animals. Neospora was only recently recognized as a distinct protozoan species [16], and although it is thought to have diverged from Toxoplasma ∼28 million years ago, the two species share nearly indistinguishable ultrastructure [17], metabolism, and 1:1 syntenic orthologs for >90% of the parasite genome [18]. Despite these similarities, important biological differences distinguish the two species with respect to virulence factors, host range, and pathogenesis. Toxoplasma undergoes sexual reproduction in felidae (cats) and asexual reproduction in virtually any mammalian host, while the Neospora sexual cycle takes place in canidae (dogs), where it demonstrates a propensity for vertical transmission from mother to fetus [19], and infects a more limited range of intermediate hosts [20], [21]. Genomic and transcriptomic analysis of these two parasites reveals that Neospora and Toxoplasma have evolved distinct repertoires of surface antigens and secreted kinases since divergence from a common ancestor [18], suggesting the ability modulate or interact with host cells in unique ways. We capitalize on the close genetic and ecological relationship between these two parasites to carry out comparative profiling of the host responses to infection. Our results demonstrate that Neospora is a potent inducer of innate IFN-α/β responses, and that Toxoplasma has evolved the capacity to suppress this response.

Results

Differential induction of innate immune signaling by genetically similar parasite species

In order to compare host transcriptional responses during Neospora and Toxoplasma infection, whole-genome expression profiling was carried out using human fibroblasts infected with either Neospora caninum (NcLiv strain) or Toxoplasma gondii (GT1, Prugniaud, or VEG strains, selected as representatives of the three dominant genotypes observed in North America [22], [23]). 822 host genes were identified as differentially transcribed (≥2-fold, FDR≤5%) during infection with any of these four parasites relative to uninfected host cells (Fig. 1a and Table S1). Grouping parasites based on the host response indicated that Toxoplasma strains known to exhibit low virulence in mice (PRU, VEG) elicit host response profiles more similar to each other than to the virulent GT1 strain. Neospora induced a host response distinct from all strains of Toxoplasma, but more closely resembling low-virulence Toxoplasma strains, indicating that these two parasite species perturb the host transcriptome in distinct ways.

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Figure 1. Differential induction of innate immune signaling by genetically related parasite species.

a) Microarray-based expression profiling of human foreskin fibroblasts (HFF) infected with Neospora caninum (NcLiv isolate) or Toxoplasma (GT1, Prugniaud or VEG strains). Heat map shows hierarchical clustering analysis of 822 genes differentially regulated relative to uninfected cells by ≥2-fold (FDR≤5%), in any of these experiments. Each row in heatmap represents average of duplicate (NcLiv and GT1) or triplicate arrays (VEG, PRU, uninf). Color pattern on heatmaps represents column Z-score. b) A cluster of 66 genes (Fig. 1a, asterisk) induced by Neospora but not any strain of Toxoplasma, including several well-known type I interferon response genes (arrows). c) Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of 66 Neospora-induced genes. Bar graph shows fold enrichment for top five GO Biological Process terms enriched at P≤0.05 and represented by ≥5 genes. Number of genes and GO term name is shown at the right of each bar. d) Fluorescence micrographs of uninfected HFF cells, or cells infected with Neospora or Toxoplasma, then challenged with GFP-tagged vesicular stomatitis virus. Representative images are shown. Experiment was repeated three times with similar results.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.g001

Hierarchical clustering of the 822 genes revealed a distinctive set of 66 genes induced only during Neospora infection (Fig. 1a, asterisk; Fig. 1b), and Gene Ontology (GO) analysis [24] indicated that these are significantly associated with antiviral responses (Fig. 1c). Antiviral genes specifically induced by Neospora infection included interferon-β1 (Ifnb1) as well as several key regulators of type I interferon responses (Fig. 1b, arrows) [25][27], including the transcription factor Irf7 (a master regulator of the antiviral program), Oas1 and Oas2 (members of the 2′-5′-oligoadenylate synthetase family that activate RNase L to initiate degradation of cellular RNA as an innate defense mechanism during viral infection), and Mx1 (a GTP-binding protein that is essential for antiviral responses to influenza infection). To test whether the transcriptional program induced by Neospora is functionally antiviral, uninfected human fibroblasts or cells infected with Neospora or Toxoplasma were challenged with GFP-tagged Vesicular Stomatitis Virus (VSV), a standard virus used in bioassays for type I interferon [28]. Imaging these cells demonstrated that while VSV grew normally in naïve and Toxoplasma-infected cells, the virus was dramatically restricted in Neospora-infected cultures (Fig. 1d).

Viruses are known to infect various parasitic protozoa [29], in some cases influencing host transcriptional responses and promoting disease [30]. Several arguments indicate thatindicate t a cryptic Neospora virus is unlikely to be the source of the type I interferon response noted above. Analysis of raw trace reads from the Toxoplasma and Neospora genome projects [18] failed to identify evidence of viral DNA. Similarly, deep sequencing of both polyadenylated mRNA and small non-coding RNA libraries prepared from Neospora and Toxoplasma infected human cells yielded no significant evidence of viral RNA, based on mapping to NCBI RefSeq virus genomes and comparison with uninfected host cells (data not shown). Finally, total RNA isolated from Toxoplasma or Neospora and treated with S1 nuclease to degrade single stranded nucleic acid showed no evidence of double stranded RNA species smaller than 12 kb after staining with ethidium bromide (Fig. S1a). In both parasite species, S1 nuclease-resistant bands greater than 12kb (Fig. S1a) were DNase sensitive (Fig. S1b). In contrast, this approach readily detected double stranded RNA from the endogenous RNA virus, LRV1, present in Leishmania guyanensis (Fig. S1, arrows) [31]. Taken together, these data suggest that a parasite molecule present in Neospora, rather than an endogenous virus, is responsible for induction of a type I interferon response.

Toxoplasma actively suppresses host cell induction of a type I interferon response

Using Mx1 transcript abundance as a read-out for host response to parasite infection, three strains of Neospora and four strains of Toxoplasma were tested for induction of the type I interferon program. All Neospora isolates were potent inducers of Mx1 expression, while no strain of Toxoplasma tested induced this response (Fig. 2a). Induction of Mx1 correlated with parasite inoculum (Fig. S2a), suggesting that infected cells (rather than uninfected bystanders) are the likely the source of this response. Because N. caninum is a common pathogen of cattle rather than humans [20], [21], primary bovine fibroblasts were also infected with Neospora, demonstrating that both human and bovine cells upregulated Mx1 expression following infection (Fig. S2b).

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Figure 2. Active invasion is not required for innate recognition of parasites.

QPCR analysis of the expression of the antiviral gene Mx1 following (a) infection of HFF cells or (b) treatment of cells with heat-killed strains of Toxoplasma (open bars) or Neospora (shaded bars). (c) confocal fluorescence microscopy of HFF cells treated with live (top row) or heat killed (bottom row) Toxoplasma-mCherry. Lysosomes are stained with LysoTracker dye. Representative images are shown. Error bars indicate standard deviations for three biological replicates; * = P≤0.01. Experiments were repeated three times with similar results.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.g002

Many responses to Toxoplasma infection require active invasion of the host cell, including activation of the transcription factors STAT3 and EGR2, and suppression of proinflammatory signaling [32][34], indicating that these phenotypes are mediated by parasite factors secreted at the time of invasion or during intracellular replication. To test whether induction of the type I interferon profile also requires active infection, parasites were heat-killed prior to inoculation. Heat-killed Neospora retained their ability induce an antiviral program, even exhibiting enhanced Mx1 induction compared to live parasites (Fig. 2b). Surprisingly, heat-killed Toxoplasma strains also induced Mx1 expression, albeit at a level that averaged 11-fold weaker induction than seen with heat-killed Neospora strains. These data demonstrate that although both parasite species harbor a factor able to trigger the type I interferon response, Neospora elicits a much more robust response.

Given that innate induction of type I interferon is usually triggered by Toll-like receptors or RIG-I-like receptors (RIG-I and MDA5) that are located in the endo-lysosomal pathway or free in the cytosol, respectively, we were surprised that killed parasites not only induced a type I interferon profile, but did so more strongly than live parasites. We hypothesized that heat-killed parasites must get internalized by fibroblasts in order to access innate receptors that elicit this response. To test this idea, we used confocal fluorescence microscopy to visualize heat-killed Toxoplasma expressing mCherry in cells labeled with LysoTracker to identify lysosomes (Fig. 2c). While live Toxoplasma could be seen replicating in LysoTracker-negative vacuoles 18 hours after infection, heat-killed parasites were internalized and localized to LysoTracker positive compartments in the cell (Fig. 2c, arrows).

The observation that heat-killed, but not live, Toxoplasma induce Mx1 expression suggested that live T. gondii actively suppressed this response. To test this hypothesis, human fibroblasts were first infected with live Toxoplasma (which does not induce Mx1 expression), and then challenged 2 hr later with heat-killed Neospora (which do induce Mx1). Supernatants were collected at 24 hr after challenge, filtered to remove parasites, and transferred to naive fibroblast cultures to assay for type I interferon (Fig. 3a). While media from Neospora treated cultures was a potent inducer of Mx1 expression, media from cells infected with Toxoplasma prior to Neospora exposure failed to elicit Mx1 expression (Fig. 3a). These results demonstrate that Toxoplasma infection suppresses innate immune induction of type I interferon.

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Figure 3. Toxoplasma actively suppresses anti-viral host responses via a soluble factor.

(a) co-infection assay in HFF cells showing Mx1 gene expression in Toxoplasma infected cultures (Tg), cultures inoculated with heat-killed Neospora (HK Nc; striped bar), or infected with Toxoplasma for one hr before challenge with heat-killed Neospora (black bar). (b) QPCR analysis of IRF7 (open bars) and HERC5 (striped bars) expression in HFF cells pre-treated with fresh media or conditioned media from T. gondii infected cells (1° treatment) prior to infection with N. caninum (2° treatment). c) HFF cells were pretreated with supernatants from experiment in panel a, then infected with VSV-GFP. Representative fluorescence micrographs are shown. Error bars indicate standard deviations for three biological replicates; * = P≤0.01. Experiment was repeated two times with similar results.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.g003

To test whether the suppressive effect observed in co-infection experiments was a cell-autonomous phenotype evident only in cells infected with Toxoplasma, conditioned media was recovered from Toxoplasma infected human fibroblasts, filtered to remove parasites, and used to pretreat naïve fibroblasts (Fig. 3b). Pretreatment of cells did not prevent subsequent infection with Neospora (not shown), but blocked Neospora induction of the antiviral genes IRF7 and HERC5, 3-fold and 4-fold, respectively (Fig. 3b). Supernatants were filtered again and transferred to new cells to test for ability to restrict a viral challenge. As expected, cultures treated with supernatants from Neospora infected cells were completely refractory to a challenge with VSV-GFP (Fig. 3c, upper right). In contrast, supernatants recovered from cultures that were pretreated with Toxoplasma conditioned media prior to Neospora infection showed impaired virus restriction (Fig. 3c, lower right). Taken together, these data show that Toxoplasma infected cells produce a soluble factor that suppresses the innate induction of type I interferon.

The macrophage response to Neospora infection is dependent on signaling through the type I interferon receptor

In order to determine the extent to which host transcriptional responses to Neospora and Toxoplasma (Fig. 1) are driven by type I interferon, bone marrow-derived murine macrophages were generated from either wild-type mice or mice lacking the type I interferon receptor subunit Ifnar1 [35]. Transcriptional profiling of wild-type (WT) and Ifnar1-deficient macrophages infected with Neospora or Toxoplasma identified 833 genes differentially regulated (≥2-fold, FDR≤5%) compared to uninfected cells (Fig. 4a, Table S2). Although Toxoplasma elicited a similar host response on both cell types, the host response to Neospora was severely abrogated by the loss of type I interferon signaling (Fig. 4b), demonstrating that signaling through this receptor constitutes the major pathway responsible for shaping the transcriptional response to N. caninum.

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Figure 4. Macrophage transcriptional responses to Neospora infection are Ifnar1-dependent.

Microarray-based expression profiling of Neospora (Nc) or Toxoplasma (Tg) infected wild-type or Ifnar1-/- bone marrow-derived mouse macrophages. a) heat map shows hierarchical clustering analysis of 833 genes differentially regulated by either Nc or Tg on either cell type relative to uninfected cells by ≥2-fold (FDR≤5%). Two clusters of co-regulated genes are indicated. Each column in heatmap represents an average of duplicate arrays, and color pattern represents row Z-score. b) Venn diagrams showing number of differentially regulated genes for each condition. c and e) GO enrichment results for cluster 1 and 2, respectively. d and f) heatmaps showing top ten most strongly induced genes in cluster 1 and 2, respectively. Gene symbol and fold change of infected WT relative to uninfected WT control are shown for each gene.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.g004

Hierarchical clustering identified two distinct clusters of co-regulated genes (Fig. 4a). Cluster 1 (212 genes) was induced by Toxoplasma, but not Neospora, and was Ifnar1-independent. Gene ontology analysis showed that this cluster was strongly enriched for terms relating to wound healing (Fig. 4c), and arginase-1, Chi3l3, Ear11 and Il4i1 were amongst the most strongly induced genes in this cluster (Fig. 4d) - all well-known markers of alternative macrophage activation, which have recently been shown to be induced during infection with certain strains of Toxoplasma [36]. In contrast, cluster 2 (199 genes) was strongly induced by Neospora, yet only weakly induced by Toxoplasma, was Ifnar1-dependent (Fig. 4a), and was enriched for GO terms related to immune cell function and inflammation (Fig. 4e). The top ten most strongly induced genes in this cluster included key STAT1-dependent genes such as Cxcl9 and Cxcl10 as well as Irf7, a master regulator of antiviral gene transcription (Fig. 4f). Taken together with our data on human fibroblasts and bovine fibroblasts, these results show that Neospora induces a strong type I interferon signature in cells from diverse host species as well as immune and non-immune cell types, suggesting a conserved innate response to these parasites.

The type I interferon response to Neospora is mediated by signaling through toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) and the adaptor protein TRIF

To identify the host pathway responsible for parasite-mediated induction of type I interferon, and downstream responses to this cytokine, bone marrow-derived macrophages were prepared from mice genetically deficient in various toll-like receptors or their adaptor proteins (Fig. 5). Neospora infection of Myd88 deficient cells still resulted in induction of Mx1 expression, ruling out a role for TLR1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 [37]. TLR4 is capable of inducing type I interferon production via either MYD88 or the alternative adapter TRIF [38], but infection of Tlr2/Tlr4 double knock-out cells induced antiviral gene expression, ruling out a role for TLR4 as well. In contrast, cells lacking Tlr3, or lacking both Myd88 and Trif, showed no induction of Mx1 by live Neospora. Tlr3−/− and Myd88−/−Trif−/− cells also failed to respond to heat-killed parasites (not shown), demonstrating that both live and dead parasites are sensed through this pathway. Since TRIF is required for TLR3 signaling [39], [40], these data identify TLR3 - known to recognize double stranded RNA [41] - as the host receptor responsible for macrophage sensing of Neospora and type I interferon responses.

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Figure 5. The Type I interferon response to Neospora infection is dependent on Tlr3 and Trif.

QPCR analysis of Mx1 expression in Neospora infected bone marrow macrophages derived from wild-type (WT), Myd88−/−, Myd88−/−/Trif−/−, Tlr2−/−/Tlr4−/− and Tlr3−/− mice. Error bars indicate standard deviations for three biological replicates; * = P≤0.01. Experiment was repeated three times with similar results.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.g005

Although TLR3 is primarily localized within endosomes, some cell types also express this receptor on the plasma membrane [42], [43]. To determine whether surface or endosomal TLR3 is responsible for sensing live and heat-killed Neospora, macrophages were pretreated with bafilomycin A1 (Fig. 6), a specific inhibitor of vacuolar ATPase that blocks endosomal acidification and subsequent fusion [44]. Although both live and heat-killed parasites induced the expression of Mx1 and Irf7 in macrophages treated with DMSO alone (Fig. 6a), this response was abolished in bafilomycin-treated cells, suggesting that endosomal TLR3 is responsible for recognizing both live and dead parasites in macrophages.

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Figure 6. Neospora RNA elicits a TLR3-dependent type I interferon response.

a) QPCR analysis of Irf7 gene expression in wild-type mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages pretreated for 1 hr with either DMSO (control) or 100 nM bafilomycin A1 prior to 24 hr infection with live (Nc) or heat-killed Neospora (HK Nc). b) Irf7 expression in Myd88−/− macrophages incubated with 1 µg/ml of either poly(I:C) or total RNA from HFF cells (host), or Neospora parasites, either alone (white) or in complex with DOTAP transfection reagent (striped), to enhance targeting of RNA to endosomes. c) Irf7 expression in Myd88−/− macrophages incubated with 1 µg/ml of either Toxoplasma or Neospora RNA with DOTAP in cells pretreated with either DMSO or a small molecule inhibitor of TLR3/dsRNA complex formation. Error bars indicate standard deviations for three biological replicates; * = P≤0.01. Experiments were repeated two or three times with similar results.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.g006

Since RNA is the prototypical ligand for TLR3 [41], parasite RNA was tested for its ability to activate this pathway. RNA extracted from Neospora or uninfected human cells (to control for any contamination of parasite material with host cell RNA) was added directly to Myd88−/− macrophage cultures (to exclude activation of TLR 7, 8 and 9, which also bind nucleic acids). None of the RNA preparations induced Mx1 or Irf7 expression, although the synthetic TLR3 ligand poly(I:C) resulted in 15-fold induction (Fig. 6b; white bars). Because it is unclear how efficiently extracellular RNA is taken up into the endosomes where TLR3 resides, parasite RNA was also complexed with the liposomal transfection reagent 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (DOTAP). When complexed with DOTAP, RNA from Neospora, but not Toxoplasma, strongly induced both Irf7 (Fig. 6b and 6c) and Mx1 (not shown). Thus, it appears that naked Neospora RNA is capable of triggering Myd88-independent type I interferon responses in macrophages, while RNA from Toxoplasma is not. Although the use of Myd88−/− cells in these experiments helped to narrow the range of TLRs that could be acting as receptors for Neospora RNA, it does not rule out a role for cytosolic RNA sensors. Therefore, we tested specifically whether TLR3 was the receptor for transfected parasite RNA by pre-incubating Myd88−/− macrophages with a small molecule competitive inhibitor of dsRNA binding to TLR3 [45]. In the presence of inhibitor, IRF7 induction by Neospora RNA was completely abolished, demonstrating that this is a TLR3-dependent process (Fig. 6c).

Discussion

Despite the importance of protozoan parasites as causes of human and animal disease, relatively little information is available on innate signaling pathways triggered by these organisms, in contrast to the extensive literature on innate responses to viral and bacterial pathogens [14]. Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored surface antigens (found in many parasite species) can bind to TLR2 and/or TLR4 [46]; Plasmodium hemozoin can activate the inflammasome [47] and (when bound to DNA) TLR9 [48], [49]; and Toxoplasma profilin binds to TLR11 [13] and TLR12 [50], [51]. These interactions, in turn, trigger the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α and IL-12. To this list, we can now add the induction of type I interferon responses (Fig. 1 and Fig. 4) via TLR3 and TRIF (Fig. 5), and our in vitro data suggest that parasite RNA is a potential trigger for this response (Fig. 6).

Infection by protozoan parasites has typically been associated with induction of type II (γ) interferon, while type I (α/β) interferon is prominent in viral infection, but type I responses to protozoa are not completely unprecedented. Toxoplasma infection elicits type I interferon from plasmacytoid dendritic cells [52], a cell type known to be a common source of this cytokine [53], while splenic red pulp macrophages produce type I interferon when exposed to Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes [54]-[56]. The parasite ligand was not identified in these studies, but the response was found to be Tlr11-dependent (Toxoplasma) and Tlr9-/Myd88-dependent (Plasmodium). More recently, a type I interferon transcriptional signature has been noted in hepatocytes infected with live (but not dead) Plasmodium sporozoites, involving the cytosolic RNA sensor MDA5 and the MAVS adaptor protein [57]. Although clearly distinct from the Tlr3- and Trif-dependent response to Neospora (and heat-killed Toxoplasma) reported above, these observations support the concept that protozoan parasites can be robust activators of type I interferon signaling (Fig. 4), and that mechanisms of innate sensing may vary depending on tissue or target cell type, parasite developmental stage, or other factors.

Although we found that both parasite species are capable of activating type I interferon responses when killed and added to cells directly, the level of induction was a log order of magnitude higher with Neospora (Fig. 2b). This may explain why transfection of macrophages with Neospora RNA, but not Toxoplasma RNA, was sufficient to elicit a TLR3-dependent induction of type I interferon responsive genes. These findings suggest that there are quantitative and/or qualitative differences in TLR3 ligand present in RNA from these parasite species. Both Toxoplasma and Neospora establish an intracellular ‘parasitophorous vacuole’ (PV) distinct from the endo-lysosomal pathway at the time of invasion [58], [59], raising the question of how parasite antigens, including nucleic acids, gain access to endosomal TLR3 or other intracellular pattern recognition receptors. One possibility is that TLR3 activation may be attributable to the release of RNA from parasites that are phagocytosed [60] or that die after invasion, rather than those engaged in productive intracellular replication. Alternatively, since the PV is intimately associated with the host mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum [61], it is possible that RNA within the PV may access the host endo-lysosomal system (Fig. 6). PV antigens are known to enter the host endoplasmic reticulum for processing and presentation to T cells on MHC class I [62][64]. Endosomal vesicles may also be recruited to the PV [65], [66], facilitating the acquisition of nutrients, and perhaps playing a role in escape from the host cell [67], [68].

While type I and II interferons utilize different receptors and transcription factors, there is significant overlap in the genes that they induce [54], [69], suggesting some degree of functional redundancy. We observed that Neospora infection drives Ifnar-dependent expression of genes traditionally considered to be Ifngr-dependent (Fig. 4), including the chemokines Cxcl9 and Cxcl10, and the GTPases Igtp and Gbp2 (Fig. 4f), all of which have been shown to be important mediators of resistance to Toxoplasma infection [70][73]. Interestingly, Kim et al., found that Ifnar−/− deficiency only impacted Plasmodium infection when mice were also lacking the receptor for interferon-γ [54], consistent with the notion that the strong IFN-γ response typically seen in protozoan infections may mask a role for type I interferons. In vivo depletions of IFN-γ were carried out to test whether IFN-γ could compensate for loss of IFN-α signaling in Neospora-infected Ifnar−/− mice (Fig. S3). Although WT mice treated with control IgG had no parasites and limited neutrophilia evident in cytospins prepared from peritoneal exudate cells at 7 days post-infection (Fig. S3a), WT mice depleted of IFN-γ had abundant parasites and high neutrophil numbers evident (Fig. S3b), and acute mortality occurred at 8 dpi (data not shown). Parasites were not observed in Ifnar−/− mice treated with control IgG (Fig. S3c), however like their WT counterparts, all Ifnar−/− mice showed high parasitemia, high neutrophil infiltration and also succumbed to infection at 8 days post-infection (Fig. S3d). Taken together, these results are consistent with previous reports that IFN-γ is essential for control of Neospora [3], [74], and extend these findings by showing that type I interferon signaling is dispensable for the control of acute high-dose Neospora infection. Similar results have emerged for Plasmodium infection, where parasite burden and disease pathogenesis are either unchanged or minimally affected by loss of type I interferon signaling [54], [55].

The observation that live Toxoplasma potently suppresses the type I interferon pathway, and that this suppression is a dominant phenotype in co-infection assays with Neospora (Fig. 2) suggests at least two possible evolutionary scenarios: 1) that the common ancestor of these parasites could suppress induction of type I interferon and Neospora lost this ability after divergence; 2) or that the common ancestor could not suppress and Toxoplasma gained this ability after divergence. Such distinct host phenotypes could provide the basis for genetic screens or comparative genomic studies to identify the parasite factor(s) responsible for modulating the pathway. The fact that suppression is mediated by a soluble factor in the supernatant of Toxoplasma infected cells (Fig. 3) also raises the possibility that standard biochemical approaches could be used to identify and characterize a novel host or parasite factor that modifies this important signaling pathway. Our observation that Toxoplasma suppresses TLR3-dependent type I interferon induction in vitro contrasts with recent findings by Koblansky et al. [51] in which Toxoplasma profilin elicited low levels of IFN-α from dendritic cells in a Tlr12-dependent manner. Given that TLR12 signaling is MYD88-dependent, while TLR3 signaling in our model is not (Fig. 5), it stands to reason that Toxoplasma suppression may exhibit pathway specificity. In addition, Koblansky et al. attribute IFN-α production to plasmacytoid dendritic cells, and we did not test the induction or suppression of TLR3-dependent responses by either Toxoplasma or Neospora in this cell type. Interestingly, even low levels of IFN-α induced during Toxoplasma infection were critical in driving IFN-γ production by NK cells to limit parasite replication in vivo [51], providing a possible evolutionary pressure for Toxoplasma parasites to limit type I interferon induction. Taken together with our data, a broader picture of innate recognition of coccidian parasites begins to emerge in which both protein and nucleic acid ligands are capable of being recognized by distinct receptors, across various cell types and host species. A more complete understanding of how these pathogens are recognized by, and interfere with, innate signaling pathways will help to shed light on important aspects of the host-pathogen relationship during infections with protozoa.

Materials and Methods

Ethics statement

This study was carried out in accordance with the recommendations in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals of the National Institutes of Health. Protocols were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use (IACUC) committee of the University of Pennsylvania (animal welfare assurance number A3079-01). The University of Pennsylvania Animal Care and Use Programs are fully accredited by the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International (AAALAC).

Parasites, cells and mice

RH, GT1, Prugniaud (Pru), VEG strain T. gondii; and Nc1 [75], Nc2 [76] and NcLiv strain N. caninum were maintained by serial passage in human foreskin fibroblast (HFF) monolayers as described previously [77]. RH stably expressing mCherry were obtained from Dr. Anita Koshy [78]. Primary bovine fibroblasts were provided by Dr. Kenneth John McLaughlin (Penn). Cryopreserved bone marrow cells recovered from Myd88−/−, Myd88/Trif−/−, and Tlr2/Tlr4−/− mice were differentiated into macrophages as described previously [79], and infected with a 1∶1 MOI of parasites for QPCR and microarray experiments at 16–22 hours post-infection. Ifnar1−/− and Tlr3−/− mice were provided by Drs. Hao Shen and Yongwon Choi (Penn), respectively. For mouse infections, WT and Ifnar1−/− mice received either control IgG or anti-IFN-γ (clone XMG-1.2, 1mg I.P., BioXCell) on day 0 and again at 4 days post-infection. Mice were infected with 3×106 NcLiv strain Neospora caninum by I.P. injection on day 0. All mice were maintained at the University of Pennsylvania in accordance with Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee guidelines. For cytospins, 200,000 cells were spun onto glass slides using a Shandon Cytospin and stained with Diff-Quik, dehydrated, mounted with Permount (Sigma Aldrich), and images captured on a Nikon E600 upright microscope.

Microarray-based expression profiling and analysis of Gene Ontology enrichment

For whole genome expression microarray, total RNA was isolated using the RNeasy Plus kit (Qiagen). Biotin-labeled complementary RNA (cRNA) was generated using the Illumina TotalPrep RNA amplification kit. RNA and cRNA quality were assessed on a BioAnalyzer (Agilent). Illumina HumanRef-8 version 3 (for HFF cells) or MouseWG-6 version 2 (for bone marrow macrophages) expression beadchips were hybridized with cRNA from two to three biological replicates per condition according to the manufacturer′s instructions, and scanned on a beadscan unit. Scanned images were converted to raw expression values using GenomeStudio v1.8 software (Illumina). Data analysis was carried out using the statistical computing environment, R (v3.0.2), the Bioconductor suite of packages for R, and RStudio (v0.97). Raw data was background subtracted, variance stabilized and normalized by robust spline normalization using the Lumi package [80]. Differentially expressed genes were identified by linear modeling and Bayesian statistics using the Limma package [81], [82]. Probes sets that were differentially regulated >2fold (FDR<5%; after controlling for multiple testing using the Benjamini-Hochberg method [83], [84]) were used for hierarchical clustering and heatmap generation in R. Multiple probe sets per gene were collapsed to a single non-redundant list of expression data using the “MaxMean” method of the CollapseRows function in R [85]. For each gene, a mean expression value was calculated for biological replicates and used for heatmap generation (Fig. 2 and Fig. 4). Clusters of co-regulated genes were identified by pearson correlation using the hclust function of the stats package in R. Data has been deposited on the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database for public access (GSE45632 and GSE45633). Gene Ontology enrichment analysis was conducted using either the Function Annotation Chart (Fig. 1c) or Functional Annotation Clustering (Fig. 4) tools using only GO BP ‘fat’ terms in the Database for Visualization and Integrative Discovery (DAVID) [86], [87]. DAVID enrichment scores >1.3 are equivalent to a P value<0.05 (Fig. 4c and 4e).

Quantitative PCR (QPCR)

cDNA was generated from total RNA using the High Capacity cDNA Reverse Transcription Kit (Applied Biosystems). QPCR was carried out using SYBR green dye and gene specific primers for human or mouse MX1 and IRF7. Relative transcript abundance was determined using the ΔΔCt method [88], using a standard curve of cDNA amplified with primers specific for the house-keeping gene GAPDH.

Viral interference assays

For Fig. 1d, confluent HFF cells were infected with Toxoplasma or Neospora for 16 hr, followed by challenge with GFP-tagged vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV; MOI = 20 pfu/host cell) for 8 hr prior to assaying by fluorescence microscopy. For Fig. 3, HFF cells were pretreated for 4 hours with either fresh media or with conditioned media recovered from Toxoplasma infected HFF cells at 24 hr post-infection and filtered to remove parasites and host cell debris. Cells were then infected with Neospora for 24 hours and induction of IRF7 and HERC5 transcript levels was measured by QPCR (Fig. 3a). Supernatants from these cultures were also recovered, filtered again through a 0.22 µm filter to remove parasites and host cell debris, and transferred to fresh HFF cell monolayers prior to VSV-GFP challenge (Fig. 3b).

Bafilomycin treatment, DOTAP transfections and TLR3/dsRNA antagonist

Wild-type bone marrow-derived macrophages were treated with 100 nM Bafilomycin A1 for 1 hr at 37°C to block endosomal fusion prior to infection, RNA harvest and QPCR as described above. For transfection of macrophages with RNA, parasite or host (HFF) total RNA was isolated using the miRNeasy kit (Qiagen). Myd88−/− bone marrow-derived macrophages were used in order to minimize induction of innate signaling pathways other than Tlr3. 1 µg total RNA or poly(I:C) (Imgenex) was added to each chamber of a 24-well plate containing 1 ml of media and 1×106 Myd88−/− macrophages. For more efficient targeting to endosomes, 1 µg of parasite RNA, host RNA, or poly(I:C) was mixed with 10 µg 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (DOTAP) liposomal transfection reagent (Roche Applied Science). Cells were incubated for 18 hr with transfection mixture and RNA was isolated for QPCR analysis as described above. To test a role for TLR3 in recognition of parasite RNA, a thiophenecarboxamidopropionate small molecule inhibitor of the TLR3/dsRNA complex (Calibochem) was added to cultures at 50 nM for 1hr at 37°C before transfection of cells with RNA/DOTAP.

Assaying for presence of parasite RNA virus

To test for presence of an endogenous RNA virus in the parasite, total RNA was extracted from purified Toxoplasma and Neospora tachyzoites using Trizol. Nuclease digestions were carried out using 60 µg of total RNA in 15 µl of volume containing 3 units/µl of S1 nuclease (Invitrogen), alone or following Dnase treatment and RNA purification, and incubated at 37°C for 45 minutes. Samples were analyzed on 0.8% native agarose in 1× TAE buffer at 4°C. S1 nuclease-treated Leishmania guyanensis (strain M4147), which contains the endogenous RNA virus LRV1, was used as a positive control.

Fluorescence microscopy to assess parasite internalization

HFF cells grown to confluency on coverslips were infected with a 3∶1 MOI of either live or heat-killed (56°C for 30 minutes) RH strain Toxoplasma expressing mCherry [78]. 18 hours after infection, coverslips incubated with 50 nM LysoTracker (Molecular Probes) for 10 minutes at 37°C were live mounted, and immediately imaged using a Leica DMI400 with Yokagawa spinning disk confocal system. Images were overlayed and analyzed using Image J software, v1.47.

Statistical Analysis and data visualization

All experiments were repeated 2-4 times, and means and standard deviations were calculated from biological replicates. Significance was determined using a Student's t-test. Statistical analysis was carried out using Prism 4 (GraphPad Software) and data visualization using DataGraph 3.0 (Visual Data Tools).

Supporting Information

Figure S1.

Assaying for double stranded RNA in Toxoplasma and Neospora. 0.8% agarose gel electrophoresis and ethidium bromide staining of Leishmania guyanensis (Lg), Toxoplasma gondii (Tg) and Neospora caninum (Nc) total RNAs treated with A) S1 nuclease, B) DNase I and S1 nuclease, C) untreated total RNA of Toxoplasma gondii (Tg) and Neospora caninum (Nc). 28S and 18S rRNAs bands sensitive to S1 nuclease shown as loading control. DNA ladder (L) with kilobase (kb) markers is shown. Arrow indicates an S1 nuclease- and Dnase-resistant double stranded RNA from L. guyanensis that corresponds to a known endogenous RNA virus [31].

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.s001

(TIFF)

Figure S2.

Host response to Neospora infection correlates with inoculum and is not restricted to human cells. QPCR analysis of the expression of the antiviral gene Mx1 in (a) HFF cells infected with Neospora tachyzoites at various multiplicity of infection (MOI), and (b) bovine primary fibroblasts infected with either Toxoplasma (Tg) or Neospora (Nc). Similar results were obtained for Irf7 (not shown). Error bars indicate standard deviations for two biological replicates; * = P≤0.01.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.s002

(TIFF)

Figure S3.

IFN-γ, but not type I interferons, are essential for control of high-dose Neospora infection in vivo. Diff-quik stained cytospins of peritoneal exudate cells recovered from (a-b) WT and (c-d) Ifnar1-/- mice (7 days post-infection) treated with either control IgG or neutralizing antibody to IFN-γ (clone XMG-1.2). Experiments were repeated two times, with 4-5 mice per group. Representative micrographs are shown. Arrows indicate parasite-infected cells.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.s003

(TIFF)

Table S1.

Illumina microarray average log2 expression values from Figure 1a showing 822 human genes differentially regulated ≥2-fold (FDR≤5%) following infection of human foreskin fibroblast (HFF) cells with either Neospora or representative Toxoplasma strains. 66 Neospora-specific antiviral genes (Figure 1b) are shown on separate tab of this Excel file.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.s004

(XLSX)

Table S2.

Illumina microarray average log2 expression values from Figure 4a showing 833 mouse genes differentially regulated ≥2-fold (FDR≤5%) following infection of wild-type and Ifnar1-/- bone marrow-derived macrophages with either Neospora (Nc2 strain) or Toxoplasma (VEG strain). Toxoplasma-specific, Ifnar1-independent genes (Fig. 4a, cluster 1; 212 genes) and Neospora specific, Ifnar1-dependent genes (Fig. 4a, cluster 2; 199 genes) are shown on separate tabs of this Excel file.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088398.s005

(XLSX)

Acknowledgments

We thank Sara Cherry (Penn) for providing VSV-GFP, Kenneth John McLaughlin (Penn) for primary bovine fibroblasts, Dan Howe (Univ. of Kentucky) for Neospora caninum strains, and Hao Shen and Yongwon Choi (Penn) for Ifnar1−/− and Tlr3−/− mice, respectively. We also thank members of the Roos lab, as well as Maria Mota, Peter Liehl, Lon-Fye Lye, Nicolas Fasel, Asis Kahn and L. David Sibley for helpful discussions.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: DPB LP DSR SMB. Performed the experiments: DPB LP NSA DAC. Analyzed the data: DPB LP NSA SMB. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: EJW IEB NSA SMB CAH. Wrote the paper: DPB DSR.

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