Abstract

The vitellarium is a highly proliferative organ, producing cells which are incorporated along with a fertilized ovum into the schistosome egg. Vitellarial growth fails to occur in virgin female schistosomes in single sex (female-only) infections, and involution of this tissue, which is accompanied by physical shrinkage of the entire worm, occurs when mature females sexually regress upon removal from their male partners. We have found that upon removal from their hosts into tissue culture, female parasites regress whether they are mated or not, but that cessation of egg production and a decline in expression of the vitelline gene p14 is delayed by mating. We used BrdU labeling to investigate whether there was a loss of proliferation in the vittelarium that might account for regression and found that the proliferation rate declined equally in paired and singled females once placed into culture. However, TUNEL staining and Caspase 3 activity measurements indicate that the loss of vitrellarial cellularity associated with regression is associated with profound apoptotic vitelline cell death, which is not apparent in the vitellaria of paired females immediately ex vivo, and which develops in vitro regardless of whether males are present or not. Furthermore, primordial vitellaria in virgin females have a high frequency of apoptotic cells but are characterized by a proliferation rate that is indistinguishable from that in fully developed vitellaria in mature paired females. Taken together, our data suggest that the vitelline proliferation rate is independent of pairing status. In contrast, the survival of vitelline cells, and therefore the development of the vitellarium, is highly male-dependent. Both processes are negatively affected by removal from the host regardless of whether male worms are present or not, and are unsustainable using standard tissue culture approaches.

Highlights

  • Infection with trematode parasites of the genus Schistosoma causes chronic and debilitating disease in over 200 million people worldwide [1,2]

  • The vitellarium never grows in virgin females and regresses in mated female parasites once they are removed from males

  • Both cellular proliferation and death within this organ are negatively affected by removal from the host regardless of whether male worms are present or not, suggesting the presence within the host of a key factor that is not represented in standard tissue culture medium

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Summary

Introduction

Infection with trematode parasites of the genus Schistosoma causes chronic and debilitating disease in over 200 million people worldwide [1,2]. Adult schistosomes exhibit sexual dimorphism and display an interesting codependency: the female resides in a groove, the gynecophoric canal, on the ventral side of the male and ongoing physical pairing (but not sperm transfer [5]) is necessary for proper sexual development [6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Egg-laying females that are physically separated from their male partners and are surgically implanted into a host in the absence of male worms cease egg laying and regress reproductively to an immature state. This regression is reversible because normal reproductive activity is resumed when separated females are re-paired with males [12,14,15]

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