A40 THE ROLE OF HYPOXIA-INDUCIBLE FACTOR IN CELLULAR METABOLIC ADAPTATION UPON GIARDIA INFECTION
E R DeMichele, O Sosnowski, T Allain, A G Buret

TL;DR
Giardia infection activates hypoxia-related genes and alters cell metabolism, mimicking low-oxygen conditions in intestinal cells.
Contribution
This study reveals that Giardia infection induces a hypoxia-like response in intestinal cells, involving HIF-dependent metabolic changes.
Findings
Giardia-infected cells upregulate HIF-target genes like VEGFA and HK2 under normoxic conditions.
Hypoxia mimetic DMOG alters glycolytic intermediates, confirming HIF's role in promoting glycolytic flux.
Giardia infection induces HIF-dependent changes in amino acid and nucleic acid metabolism.
Abstract
Recent findings have highlighted the integral role of oxygen tension in gastrointestinal (GI) homeostasis. During hypoxia when oxygen supply is limited, mammalian cells utilize the Hypoxia-Inducible Factor (HIF) complex to activate genes that promote cell survival and alter glucose metabolism. The GI system exists in a state of physiologic hypoxia, subject to further alterations by pathogens. Although tissue and blood parasites are known to influence tissue oxygen tension, little is known regarding the modulation of hypoxia and HIF by enteric parasites. This project aims to characterize the effect of Giardia duodenalis, a common enteric protozoan that perturbs gastrointestinal function leading to diarrheal disease, on the cellular hypoxic response. We hypothesize that hypoxia-associated genes are activated upon Giardia infection, leading to an adaptive metabolic response with increased…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParasitic Infections and Diagnostics
