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Trypanosoma cruzi: attenuation of virulence and protective immunogenicity after monoallelic disruption of the cub gene.

TitleTrypanosoma cruzi: attenuation of virulence and protective immunogenicity after monoallelic disruption of the cub gene.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsBarrio, AB, Van Voorhis, WC, Basombrío, MA
JournalExp Parasitol
Volume117
Issue4
Pagination382-9
Date Published2007 Dec
ISSN0014-4894
KeywordsAlleles, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Blotting, Southern, Calmodulin, Electroporation, Female, Gene Deletion, Genetic Complementation Test, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Multigene Family, Transfection, Trypanosoma cruzi, Ubiquitin, Virulence
Abstract

Calmodulin-ubiquitin (cub) is a single-copy gene of Trypanosoma cruzi, which encodes a 208 aminoacid polypeptide of unknown function, containing putative calcium-binding domains. After targeted deletion, a clone (TulCub8) was derived where one of the two alleles was disrupted. This clone displayed a sharp and stable loss of virulence for mice. Parasitemias after inoculation of 10(6) trypomastigotes of the mutant, as compared to wild-type parasites were 68-fold lower (p=0.018) in adult Swiss mice and 27-fold lower (p=0.002) in newborn Balb/c mice. Epimastigote inocula of the mutant were strongly protective against infection by wild-type parasites. Virulence was not restored by serial passage in mice, showing that the attenuated phenotype is stable and gene-conversion from the intact cub allele does not occur at an appreciable rate. Retransfection of the missing cub allele restored virulence. Complementation experiments showed that the intact cub gene is necessary for full expression of virulence.

DOI10.1016/j.exppara.2007.05.005
Alternate JournalExp. Parasitol.
PubMed ID17624327