On 2013 Dec 11, Gary Ward commented:
This paper presents a clever new way to generate gene knockouts in T. gondii, using a conditional dimerizable Cre recombinase (DiCre) system. Because the knockouts are experimentally induced with rapamycin, even essential genes can be disrupted for phenotypic characterization. In a first application of the technique, the authors show that two genes encoding proteins previously believed to be essential for parasite invasion, myosin A and the secreted adhesin MIC2, are in fact dispensable. In the case of the myoA knockout parasites, it would be interesting to see whether or not another parasite myosin is upregulated or now associates with the myosin motor complex (e.g., as assessed by a GAP45 IP) in the absence of myosin A.
In contrast, parasites could not tolerate disruption of act1 (actin). Evidence is presented to suggest that the actin knockouts remain capable of invasion and the authors suggest that the most important defect is instead in apicoplast segregation. Have the authors attempted to isolate and maintain an act1 knockout clone in the presence of isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP)? Blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum can survive independently of the apicoplast as long as this isoprenoid precursor is provided (Yeh et al. PLOS Biol [2011] 9(8): e1001138). It would be interesting to look at the T. gondii act1 knockout’s ability (or perhaps inability) to glide and invade under similar conditions.
The picture that emerges from these ground-breaking studies is that myosin A, MIC2 and actin are involved in host cell invasion, as the current model would posit, but that there is another previously unrecognized way for the parasites to invade independent of these proteins.
Posted by Gary Ward on behalf of the University of Vermont Toxoplasma Journal Club (UVM ToxoJC); members include Jenna Foderaro, Anne Kelsen, Shruthi Krishnamurthy, Jacqueline Leung, Pramod Rompikuntal, Luke Tilley & Gary Ward
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