Transcriptional profiling reveals T cells cluster around neurons injected with Toxoplasma gondii proteins

2020 
Toxoplasma gondii has a tropism for and persistence in the CNS which underlies the symptomatic disease Toxoplasma causes in humans. Our recent work has shown that neurons are the primary CNS cell with which Toxoplasma interacts and infects in vivo. This predilection for neurons suggests that parasitic persistence in the CNS depends specifically upon parasite manipulation of the host neurons. Yet, most work on Toxoplasma-host cell interactions has been done in vitro and in non-neuronal cells. We address this gap by utilizing our Toxoplasma-Cre system that allows permanent marking and tracking of neurons injected with parasite effector proteins in vivo. Using laser capture microdissection (LCM) and RNA-seq, we isolated and transcriptionally profiled Toxoplasma-injected neurons (TINs), Bystander neurons (nearby non-Toxoplasma injected neurons), and neurons from uninfected mice (controls). These profiles show that TINs transcriptomes significantly differ from the transcriptomes of Bystander and control neurons and that much of this difference is driven by increased levels of transcripts from immune cells, especially CD8+ T cells and monocytes. These data suggest that when we used LCM to isolate neurons from infected mice, we also picked up fragments of CD8+ T cells and monocytes clustering in extreme proximity around TINs and, to a lesser extent, Bystander neurons. In addition, we found that Toxoplasma transcripts were primarily found in the TINs transcriptome, not in the Bystander transcriptome. Collectively, these data suggest that, contrary to common perception, neurons that directly interact with or harbor parasites can be recognized by CD8+ T cells.
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