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The molecular biology and immune control of chronic Toxoplasma gondii infection
Xiao-Yu Zhao, Sarah E. Ewald
Xiao-Yu Zhao, Sarah E. Ewald
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Review Series

The molecular biology and immune control of chronic Toxoplasma gondii infection

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Abstract

Toxoplasma gondii is an incredibly successful parasite owing in part to its ability to persist within cells for the life of the host. Remarkably, at least 350 host species of T. gondii have been described to date, and it is estimated that 30% of the global human population is chronically infected. The importance of T. gondii in human health was made clear with the first reports of congenital toxoplasmosis in the 1940s. However, the AIDS crisis in the 1980s revealed the prevalence of chronic infection, as patients presented with reactivated chronic toxoplasmosis, underscoring the importance of an intact immune system for parasite control. In the last 40 years, there has been tremendous progress toward understanding the biology of T. gondii infection using rodent models, human cell experimental systems, and clinical data. However, there are still major holes in our understanding of T. gondii biology, including the genes controlling parasite development, the mechanisms of cell-intrinsic immunity to T. gondii in the brain and muscle, and the long-term effects of infection on host homeostasis. The need to better understand the biology of chronic infection is underscored by the recent rise in ocular disease associated with emerging haplotypes of T. gondii and our lack of effective treatments to sterilize chronic infection. This Review discusses the cell types and molecular mediators, both host and parasite, that facilitate persistent T. gondii infection. We highlight the consequences of chronic infection for tissue-specific pathology and identify open questions in this area of host-Toxoplasma interactions.

Authors

Xiao-Yu Zhao, Sarah E. Ewald

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Figure 3

Environmental and host cell–specific pressures driving the T.

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Environmental and host cell–specific pressures driving the T.

gondiitac...
gondiitachyzoite to bradyzoite transition. Left: T. gondii tachyzoites can invade almost any nucleated host cell type and grow within the PVM formed from host plasma membrane. In vitro, a range of tissue culture stress conditions can upregulate bradyzoite-specific genes. As parasites polarize to a bradyzoite transcriptional profile, they synthesize a heavily glycosylated cyst wall beneath the PVM. The frequency and rate of bradyzoite differentiation are also influenced by the host cell type, cell cycle status, the host cell lifespan, and inflammatory signals in vitro. In vivo, cysts are most frequently observed in neurons, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle, and retinal pigment epithelial cells. If the host is immune-suppressed, parasites shift toward a replicative tachyzoite form in a process referred to as recrudescence, which is associated with tissue damage, particularly in the eye.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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