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Toxoplasma gondii infection triggers chronic cachexia and sustained commensal dysbiosis in mice

Jessica A. Hatter, Yue Moi Kouche, Stephanie J. Melchor, Katherine Ng, Donna M. Bouley, View ORCID ProfileJohn C. Boothroyd, View ORCID ProfileSarah E. Ewald
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/247866
Jessica A. Hatter
1Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology and the Carter Immunology Center, University of Virginia School of Medicine Charlottesville VA.
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Yue Moi Kouche
2Department of Comparative Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford CA.
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Stephanie J. Melchor
1Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology and the Carter Immunology Center, University of Virginia School of Medicine Charlottesville VA.
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Katherine Ng
3Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University, Stanford CA.
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Donna M. Bouley
2Department of Comparative Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford CA.
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John C. Boothroyd
3Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University, Stanford CA.
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Sarah E. Ewald
1Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology and the Carter Immunology Center, University of Virginia School of Medicine Charlottesville VA.
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  • For correspondence: se2s@virginia.edu
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Abstract

Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite with a predation-mediated transmission cycle between rodents and felines. Intermediate hosts acquire Toxoplasma by eating parasite cysts which invade the small intestine, disseminate systemically and finally establish host life-long chronic infection in brain and muscles. Here we show that Toxoplasma infection can trigger a severe form of sustained cachexia: a disease of progressive weight loss that is a causal predictor of mortality in cancer, chronic disease and many infections. Toxoplasma cachexia is characterized by acute anorexia, systemic inflammation and loss of 20% body mass. Although mice recover from symptoms of peak sickness they fail to regain muscle mass or visceral adipose depots. We asked whether the damage to the intestinal microenvironment observed at acute time points was sustained in chronic infection and could thereby play a role the sustaining cachexia. We found that parasites replicate in the same region of the distal jejunum/proximal ileum throughout acute infection, inducing the development of secondary lymphoid structures and severe, regional inflammation. Small intestine pathology was resolved by 5 weeks post-infection. However, changes in the commensal populations, notably an outgrowth of Clostridia spp., were sustained in chronic infection. Importantly, uninfected animals co-housed with infected mice display similar changes in commensal microflora but never display symptoms of cachexia, indicating that altered commensals are not sufficient to explain the cachexia phenotype alone. These studies indicate that Toxoplasma infection is a novel and robust model to study the immune-metabolic interactions that contribute chronic cachexia development, pathology and potential reversal.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted January 25, 2018.
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Toxoplasma gondii infection triggers chronic cachexia and sustained commensal dysbiosis in mice
Jessica A. Hatter, Yue Moi Kouche, Stephanie J. Melchor, Katherine Ng, Donna M. Bouley, John C. Boothroyd, Sarah E. Ewald
bioRxiv 247866; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/247866
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Toxoplasma gondii infection triggers chronic cachexia and sustained commensal dysbiosis in mice
Jessica A. Hatter, Yue Moi Kouche, Stephanie J. Melchor, Katherine Ng, Donna M. Bouley, John C. Boothroyd, Sarah E. Ewald
bioRxiv 247866; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/247866

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