Abstract

The hard tick Haemaphysalis qinghaiensis is the vector of a wide variety of infectious agents, such as spirochetes and other bacteria as well as viruses in the western plateau of China. Tick midgut is the key tissue involved in the host-pathogen-vector interface. Multiple midgut proteins are related to key functions in blood digestion, tick survival, and tick-borne pathogen transmission. However, information on the sex-specific proteins expressed in the midgut tissue of H. qinghaiensis for which the genome has not been sequenced is limited. Hence, we assembled and characterized the transcriptome of the H. qinghaiensis midgut and identified the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in female and male ticks. The sequencing of the mRNA for this nonmodel species is essential for producing a protein database for mass spectrometry-based identification. Here, we combined high-throughput parallel sequencing and label-free quantitative proteomics analysis to extensively characterize the tick midgut using massive RNA sequencing and mass spectrometry, which allowed the detection of genes and proteins. A total of 279,186 transcripts were annotated into 125,790 coding sequences (CDSs), which were manually curated into 96 different gene families. A total of 12,837 DEGs between the two sexes were found by RNA-seq analysis. Of these, 5401 were upregulated genes, while 7436 were downregulated genes. The most common molecular functions were those related to the endocrine system, translation, signal transduction, transport, and catabolism. Meanwhile, the most common biological processes were related to cellular processes, metabolic processes, cellular anatomical entities, and cargo receptor activities. An analysis of the label-free protein quantitation dataset showed 272 upregulated proteins and 46 downregulated proteins when the fold-change was >2.0 (LC-MS/MS). Association analysis of the transcriptome and proteome with GO functional enrichment showed that the majority of the genes (proteins) were those related to catalytic activity, binding, cellular processes, metabolic processes, and responses to stimuli. This study aims to elucidate the digestive physiology of H. qinghaiensis as well as its physiological sexual dimorphism. This will allow the identification of protein candidates with physiological importance that could be used as targets to control the vector as well as the transmission of tick-borne pathogens to humans and animals.

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