Abstract

BackgroundIron metabolism and regulation is an indispensable part of species survival, most importantly for blood feeding insects. Iron regulatory proteins are central regulators of iron homeostasis, whose binding to iron response element (IRE) stem-loop structures within the UTRs of genes regulate expression at the post-transcriptional level. Despite the extensive literature on the mechanism of iron regulation in human, less attention has been given to insect and more specifically the blood feeding insects, where research has mainly focused on the characterization of ferritin and transferrin. We thus, examined the mechanism of iron homeostasis through a genome-wide computational identification of IREs and other enriched motifs in the UTRs of Glossina morsitans with the view to identify new IRE-regulated genes.ResultsWe identified 150 genes, of which two are known to contain IREs, namely the ferritin heavy chain and the MRCK-alpha. The remainder of the identified genes is considered novel including 20 hypothetical proteins, for which an iron-regulatory mechanism of action was inferred. Forty-three genes were found with IRE-signatures of regulation in two or more insects, while 46 were only found to be IRE-regulated in two species. Notably 39 % of the identified genes exclusively shared IRE-signatures in other Glossina species, which are potentially Glossina-specific adaptive measures in addressing its unique reproductive biology and blood meal-induced iron overload. In line with previous findings, we found no evidence pertaining to an IRE regulation of Transferrin, which highlight the importance of ferritin heavy chain and the other proposed transporters in the tsetse fly. In the context of iron-sequestration, key players of tsetse immune defence against trypanosomes have been introduced namely 14 stress and immune response genes, while 28 cell-envelop, transport, and binding genes were assigned a putative role in iron trafficking. Additionally, we identified and annotated enriched motifs in the UTRs of the putative IRE-regulated genes to derive at a co-regulatory network that maintains iron homeostasis in tsetse flies. Three putative microRNA-binding sites namely Gy-box, Brd-box and K-box motifs were identified among the regulatory motifs, enriched in the UTRs of the putative IRE-regulated genes.ConclusionBeyond our current view of iron metabolism in insects, with ferritin and transferrin as its key players, this study provides a comprehensive catalogue of genes with possible roles in the acquisition; transport and storage of iron hence iron homeostasis in the tsetse fly.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-2932-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Iron metabolism and regulation is an indispensable part of species survival, most importantly for blood feeding insects

  • Several lines of evidence exist in understanding the fate of blood meal iron in mosquitoes, no such extensive work has been done in the tsetse fly

  • Research in understanding iron metabolism in insects has mostly focused on a few genes including ferritin [44,45,46], transferrin [47] [6], iron regulatory protein 1 [48], and the divalent metal transporter1 (DMT1) [49]

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Summary

Introduction

Iron metabolism and regulation is an indispensable part of species survival, most importantly for blood feeding insects. Despite the extensive literature on the mechanism of iron regulation in human, less attention has been given to insect and the blood feeding insects, where research has mainly focused on the characterization of ferritin and transferrin. Insect disease vectors are of immense significance to human health, with blood-feeding being a major habit exhibited by these insects. Iron-metabolism is well-characterized in humans, little is known in insects and blood-feeding insects. Human iron metabolism requires the function of several genes, including iron regulatory proteins, transferrin receptors (TfR), transferrin (Tf ), ferritin, divalent metal transporter (DCT1), ferroportin, hephaestin, ceruloplasmin, iron-sulfur cluster proteins (ISC), frataxin, ferrochelatase, adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette (ABC) and several others, the majority of which have no known homologs in insects. Secreted insect ferritin has been found in high concentrations in the hemolymph, while cytoplasmic ferritin is significantly lower [5, 6]

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