Immune to defeat
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CO-EVOLUTION
Immune to defeat
A dramatic example of the ‘arms race’ between hosts and pathogens
has been observed in the response of mice to the parasite that causes
toxoplasmosis.
MICHAEL L REESE
Related research article Lilue J, Muller UB,
Steinfeldt T, Howard JC. 2013. Reciprocal
virulence and resistance polymorphism in
the relationship between Toxoplasma
gondii and the house mouse. eLife 2:01298.
doi: 10.7554/eLife.01298
Image Certain alleles of the protein
Irgb2-b1 appear to block effector
molecules secreted by the parasite that
causes Toxoplasma. This allows other IRG
proteins, including Irga6 (shown here), to
attack the parasite.
O
Copyright Reese. This article is
distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License,
which permits unrestricted use and
redistribution provided that the original
author and source are credited.
rganisms that grow in close contact
with one another often co-evolve. This
is particularly evident in pathogens and
their hosts, with each always needing to stay one
small step ahead of the other in order to survive.
This evolutionary competition has given rise to
the systems of immune molecules that hosts
use to recognize and neutralize invading pathogens, and also to the effector molecules that
pathogens use to survive attack by the immune
system. A prime example of this can be seen in
the interactions between a class of enzymes
called the immune-related GTPases (IRG proteins) and the pathogens that they recognize
and destroy (Kim et al., 2012). It is known that
IRG proteins work by assembling on the surface
of the vacuoles within which the pathogens
replicate, but the details of this mechanism are
poorly understood.
Reese. eLife 2013;2:e01599. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.01599
Now, in eLife, Jonathan Howard of the University
of Cologne and colleagues present striking evidence that the co-evolution of IRG proteins with
Toxoplasma gondii—the parasite that causes
toxoplasmosis—has been an important driving
force in the functional evolution of the IRG system
(Lilue et al., 2013). Howard and colleagues—
including Jingtao Lilue as first author, Urs Muller
and Tobias Steinfeldt—found that mice derived
from wild mice were resistant to strains of the
parasite that were lethal to laboratory mice.
Remarkably, they demonstrated that this resistance was due to genetic variation in one particular form of IRG protein, named Irgb2-b1: they
found that certain alleles of Irgb2-b1 appeared
to inhibit the activity of the effector molecules
secreted by the parasite, which themselves have
evolved to inactivate the IRG system.
As it enters a new host cell, Toxoplasma secretes
an active kinase called ROP18 and a diverse family
of pseudokinases, called ROP5. The ROP5 pseudokinases appear to sequester the IRG proteins
and then present them for phosphorylation by
ROP18 (Fleckenstein et al., 2012). The process of
phosphorylation inactivates the IRG proteins,
which prevents them from assembling on the
surface of the vacuole. This, in turn, allows the
parasites to replicate (Figure 1; Steinfeldt et al.,
2010; Fentress et al., 2010). There are considerable differences in the virulence (to mice) of the
major strains of Toxoplasma, and genetic variations in ROP5 and ROP18 can explain almost all
of these differences (Saeij et al., 2006; Taylor
et al., 2006; Behnke et al., 2011; Reese et al.,
2011). This highlights the importance of the IRG
system in the control of Toxoplasma infection in
mice, and the pressure that competition with this
system has placed on the parasite.
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Co-evolution | Immune to defeat
Figure 1. Hosts vs parasites. Toxoplasma parasites
can kill laboratory mice (left) because they secrete
effector molecules (ROP5 & ROP18) that prevent the
effector IRG proteins (dark green) in the immune system
of the mice from doing their job, which is to prevent the
Toxoplasma parasites (grey) replicating themselves
inside a vacuole. Lilue et al. show that in mice derived
from wild mice (right), a particular isoform of an IRG
protein (Irgb2-b1) binds to the ROP5 molecules, which
means that the effector IRG proteins can assemble on
the surface of the vacuole. This allows wild-derived
mice to control an otherwise lethal infection in a way
that, seemingly paradoxically, enables the survival of
both the host and the parasite (which survives inside
cysts in the brain and muscle tissue of the host).
As is typical of genes under strong selective
pressure, the IRG genes differ both in copy number
and in coding sequence in closely related species
and even, as described by Lilue et al., among
individuals within the same species. Previously
the different forms of an IRG protein have been
grouped into two distinct functional classes:
effector IRG proteins that destroy the vacuoles
inside which the pathogens replicate, and regulatory IRGs that are thought to inhibit premature
activation of the system (Hunn et al., 2011).
However, Irgb2-b1—the form of the protein
identified by Lilue et al.—appears to belong to
a third class of IRG proteins that recognize a
particular pathogen effector rather than the pathogen itself. They found that Irgb2-b1 only attached
itself to Toxoplasma vacuoles that were already
coated with ROP5. Moreover, Irgb2-b1 loading
appeared to block the activity of the ROP5 and
ROP18 proteins. This left the effector IRG proteins free to assemble on the surface of the
vacuole, thus leading to the destruction of the
parasite (Figure 1). Strikingly, mice that carried
the protective allele of Irgb2-b1 were able to
survive acute infection with a highly virulent
Reese. eLife 2013;2:e01599. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.01599
strain of the parasite, whereas infection by just
one parasite of the same strain would kill a laboratory mouse.
Toxoplasma is also a survivor—as the acute
infection ends, the parasite switches to a slowgrowing form that becomes enclosed within cysts
in the brain and muscle of the host, as was the
case with the wild mice studied by Lilue et al.
When a host is killed and eaten by a carnivore,
the parasite switches back to a fast growing stage
to infect its new host. Because strains of the
parasite that secrete the virulent versions of both
ROP5 and ROP18 are able to completely defeat
the IRG system in laboratory mice, it was thought
that these strains could not have co-evolved with
mice, because the death of the host can be an
evolutionary dead-end for a pathogen. The fact
that Irgb2-b1 derived from wild mice represents a
specific countermeasure to the parasite effectors
provides a strong argument for co-evolution. The
work of Lilue, Muller, Steinfeldt and Howard thus
reminds us to look beyond lab-adapted organisms
and examine biology in the wild to discover its full
diversity.
Michael L Reese is at the Department of Pharmacology,
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, United States
Competing interests: The author declares that no
competing interests exist.
Published 29 October (...truncated)