TY - JOUR TI - Role of cytoneme structures and extracellular vesicles in Trichomonas vaginalis parasite-parasite communication AU - Salas, Nehuén AU - Blasco Pedreros, Manuela AU - dos Santos Melo, Tuanne AU - Maguire, Vanina G AU - Sha, Jihui AU - Wohlschlegel, James A AU - Pereira-Neves, Antonio AU - de Miguel, Natalia A2 - Rodrigues, Marcio L A2 - Soldati-Favre, Dominique A2 - Fiori, PierLuigi VL - 12 PY - 2023 DA - 2023/05/02 SP - e86067 C1 - eLife 2023;12:e86067 DO - 10.7554/eLife.86067 UR - https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.86067 AB - Trichomonas vaginalis, the etiologic agent of the most common non-viral sexually transmitted infection worldwide. With an estimated annual prevalence of 276 million new cases, mixed infections with different parasite strains are expected. Although it is known that parasites interact with their host to enhance their own survival and transmission, evidence of mixed infections call into question the extent to which unicellular parasites communicate with each other. Here, we demonstrated that different T. vaginalis strains can communicate through the formation of cytoneme-like membranous cell connections. We showed that cytonemes formation of an adherent parasite strain (CDC1132) is affected in the presence of a different strain (G3 or B7RC2). Our findings provide evidence that this effect is contact-independent and that extracellular vesicles (EVs) are responsible, at least in part, of the communication among strains. We found that EVs isolated from G3, B7RC2, and CDC1132 strains contain a highly distinct repertoire of proteins, some of them involved in signaling and communication, among other functions. Finally, we showed that parasite adherence to host cells is affected by communication between strains as binding of adherent T. vaginalis CDC1132 strain to prostate cells is significantly higher in the presence of G3 or B7RC2 strains. We also observed that a poorly adherent parasite strain (G3) adheres more strongly to prostate cells in the presence of an adherent strain. The study of signaling, sensing, and cell communication in parasitic organisms will enhance our understanding of the basic biological characteristics of parasites, which may have important consequences in pathogenesis. KW - parasite KW - communication KW - vesicles KW - Trichomonas KW - filopodia KW - pathogenesis JF - eLife SN - 2050-084X PB - eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd ER -