| Literature DB >> 34386856 |
C Larrazabal1, C Hermosilla2, A Taubert2, I Conejeros2.
Abstract
Neospora caninum represents an obligate intracellular parasite that belongs to the phylum Apicomplexa and is a major abortive agent in bovines. During merogony, N. caninum tachyzoites invade and proliferate in host cells in vivo, including endothelial cells of lymphatic and blood vessels. The egress at the end of the lytic cycle is tightly regulated in apicomplexans. Evidence in Toxoplasma gondii shows that Ca++ signalling governs tachyzoite egress. Much less is known on egress mechanisms of N. caninum. Here, we show, using 3D live cell holotomographic microscopy in fluo-4 AM-loaded N. caninum-infected BUVEC, that treatments with the calcium ionophore A23187 at 24- and 42-h post-infection (h p. i.) induced a fast and sustained increase in Ca++ signals in parallel to tachyzoite egress. A23187 treatments exclusively triggered tachyzoite release at 42-h p. i. but failed to do so at 24-h p. i. indicating a role for meront maturation in calcium-induced tachyzoite egress. Overall, we show that live cell 3D holotomographic analysis in combination with epifluorescence is a suitable tool to study calcium dynamics related to coccidian egress or other important cell functions.Entities:
Keywords: 3D microscopy; A23187; Cattle; Egress; Holotomography; Neospora caninum
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34386856 PMCID: PMC8986705 DOI: 10.1007/s00436-021-07260-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitol Res ISSN: 0932-0113 Impact factor: 2.289
Figure 1.Calcium distribution in N. caninum-infected BUVEC determined by 3D tomographic microscopy. Refractive index (A1, B1 and C1) and fluorescent signal-based images (A2, B2, C2) of fluo-4-loaded BUVEC were obtained at 24- and 42-h p. i. Non-infected BUVEC were used as controls. Images exemplary illustrate calcium-derived signals (green fluorescence) of non-infected (A) and N. caninum-infected BUVEC at 24- (B) and 42-h p. i. (C). The white arrow in (A3) highlights perinuclear vesicle distribution and subapical calcium accumulation in intracellular tachyzoites (B3-C3). The full registry in video format can be found in the supplementary material. Size scale bars correspond to 5 μm
Figure 2.A23187 treatments induce a rapid and sustained calcium flux in non-infected and N. caninum-infected BUVEC. Fluorescence-derived images and measurements on calcium fluxes induced by A23187. A The images illustrate the changes in cellular calcium (pseudo-colour) dynamics in non-infected and N. caninum-infected BUVEC. Arrows highlight Ca++-driven signal accumulation in meronts over time. B Image-derived fluorescence intensity measurements over time in A23187-treated cells. Error bars express standard error of at least 5 cells. C The full registry in video format and the AUC analyses of image-derived fluorescence can be found in the supplementary material. Size scale bars correspond to 5 μm
Figure 3.Calcium influx induced by A23187 treatment triggers a fast tachyzoite egress from N. caninum-infected BUVEC at 42-h p. i. Holotomographic images show a fast tachyzoite egress induced by A23187 treatments from N. caninum-infected BUVEC. Refractive index (A) or digital staining (B). Arrows highlight an early rosette disassembly and massive egress of motile tachyzoites from mature meronts. (C) Bar graph illustrating the mean of the percentage of meronts releasing tachyzoites after 10-min post-A23187 treatments ± standard deviation. The full registry in video format can be found in the supplementary material. Size scale bars correspond to 5 μm