Abstract

BackgroundYellow cattle and water buffalo are important natural reservoir hosts and the main transmission sources of Schistosoma japonicum in endemic areas of China. The worms from the two hosts have marked differences in general worm morphology and ultrastructure, gene transcription and protein expression profiles.ResultsTo investigate microRNAs (miRNAs) involved in the regulation of schistosome development and survival, we compared miRNA expression profiles of adult schistosomes derived from yellow cattle and water buffalo by using high-throughput sequencing with Illumina Hiseq Xten. Schistosoma japonicum from water buffalo and yellow cattle yielded 63.78 million and 63.21 million reads, respectively, of which nearly 50% and 49% could be mapped to selected miRNAs in miRbase. A total of 206 miRNAs were identified, namely 79 previously annotated miRNAs of S. japonicum and 127 miRNAs that matched with the S. japonicum genome and were highly similar to the annotated miRNAs from other organisms. Among the 79 miRNAs, five (sja-miR-124-3p, sja-miR-219-5p, sja-miR-2e-3p, sja-miR-7-3p and sja-miR-3490) were significantly upregulated in the schistosomes from water buffalo compared with those from yellow cattle. A total of 268 potential target genes were predicted for these five differentially expressed miRNAs. Eleven differentially expressed targets were confirmed by qRT-PCR among 15 tested targets, one of which was further validated through dual-luciferase reporter assay. Among the 127 ‘possible’ S. japonicum miRNAs, ten were significantly differentially expressed in the schistosomes from these two hosts.ConclusionsThese results highlight the important roles of miRNAs in regulating the development and survival of schistosomes in water buffalo and yellow cattle and facilitate understanding of the miRNA regulatory mechanisms in schistosomes derived from different susceptible hosts.

Highlights

  • Yellow cattle and water buffalo are important natural reservoir hosts and the main transmission sources of Schistosoma japonicum in endemic areas of China

  • Our results provide valuable information for understanding the regulatory roles of miRNAs involved in the development and survival of S. japonicum derived from water buffalo and yellow cattle, and lay a solid foundation for further functional studies of these differentially expressed miRNAs

  • The obtained clean reads were mapped to the S. japonicum genome (WormBase ParaSite v.10.) with an average mapping ratio of 99.62%

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Yellow cattle and water buffalo are important natural reservoir hosts and the main transmission sources of Schistosoma japonicum in endemic areas of China. Schistosomiasis, one of the most severe zoonotic diseases caused by several species of blood flukes of the genus Schistosoma, affects approximately 260 million people worldwide [1]. The three main species causing human disease are Schistosoma japonicum, Schistosoma mansoni and Schistosoma haematobium [3]. S. japonicum is prevalent mainly in China, the Philippines and some areas of Indonesia [4]. The extensive use of this drug has led to major concerns regarding the development of drug resistance, which would severely compromise current treatment and control efforts

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call