Cellular barcoding of protozoan pathogens reveals the within-host population dynamics of Toxoplasma gondii host colonization

Authors:
Ceire J Wincott, Gayathri Sritharan, Henry J Benns, Dana May, Carla Gilabert-Carbajo, Monique Bunyan, Aisling R Fairweather, Eduardo Alves, Ivan Andrew, Laurence Game, Eva-Maria Frickel, Calvin Tiengwe, Sarah E Ewald,  Matthew A Child
In:
Source: Cell Rep
Publication Date: (2022)
Issue: 2: 8
Research Area:
Parasitology
Cells used in publication:
Toxoplasma gondii
Species: unicellular
Tissue Origin:
Platform:
4D-Nucleofector® X-Unit
Experiment

For strategy A, 96 independent transfections were carried out in 16 well Nucleocuvette strips. 10 µg of the pSAG1::Cas9-U6::sgUPRT vector and 10 µg of the barcode oligo (equivalent to an~1:160molar ratio of plasmid to oligo) were co-transfected into approximately 1×106 extracellular tachyzoites using the 4D-Nucleofector X Unit programme F1-115 (Lonza).

Abstract

Cellular barcoding techniques are powerful tools to understand microbial pathogenesis. However, barcoding strategies have not been broadly applied to protozoan parasites, which have unique genomic structures and virulence strategies compared with viral and bacterial pathogens. Here, we present a CRISPR-based method to barcode protozoa, which we successfully apply to Toxoplasma gondii and Trypanosoma brucei. Using libraries of barcoded T. gondii, we evaluate shifts in the population structure from acute to chronic infection of mice. Contrary to expectation, most barcodes were present in the brain one month post-intraperitoneal infection in both inbred CBA/J and outbred Swiss mice. Although parasite cyst number and barcode diversity declined over time, barcodes representing a minor fraction of the inoculum could become a dominant population in the brain by three months post-infection. These data establish a cellular barcoding approach for protozoa and evidence that the blood-brain barrier is not a major bottleneck to colonization by T. gondii.