Abstract

Our ability to control diseases caused by parasitic nematodes is constrained by a limited portfolio of effective drugs and a paucity of robust tools to investigate parasitic nematode biology. RNA interference (RNAi) is a reverse-genetics tool with great potential to identify novel drug targets and interrogate parasite gene function, but present RNAi protocols for parasitic nematodes, which remove the parasite from the host and execute RNAi in vitro, are unreliable and inconsistent. We have established an alternative in vivo RNAi protocol targeting the filarial nematode Brugia malayi as it develops in an intermediate host, the mosquito Aedes aegypti. Injection of worm-derived short interfering RNA (siRNA) and double stranded RNA (dsRNA) into parasitized mosquitoes elicits suppression of B. malayi target gene transcript abundance in a concentration-dependent fashion. The suppression of this gene, a cathepsin L-like cysteine protease (Bm-cpl-1) is specific and profound, both injection of siRNA and dsRNA reduce transcript abundance by 83%. In vivo Bm-cpl-1 suppression results in multiple aberrant phenotypes; worm motility is inhibited by up to 69% and parasites exhibit slow-moving, kinked and partial-paralysis postures. Bm-cpl-1 suppression also retards worm growth by 48%. Bm-cpl-1 suppression ultimately prevents parasite development within the mosquito and effectively abolishes transmission potential because parasites do not migrate to the head and proboscis. Finally, Bm-cpl-1 suppression decreases parasite burden and increases mosquito survival. This is the first demonstration of in vivo RNAi in animal parasitic nematodes and results indicate this protocol is more effective than existing in vitro RNAi methods. The potential of this new protocol to investigate parasitic nematode biology and to identify and validate novel anthelmintic drug targets is discussed.

Highlights

  • Lymphatic filariasis is a disease caused by filarial nematodes including Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi, transmitted through the bite of infected mosquitoes

  • Lymphatic filariasis is a debilitating tropical disease caused by parasitic nematodes such as Brugia malayi that are transmitted to humans through the bite of infected mosquitoes

  • We have developed a novel and highly effective in vivo RNA interference (RNAi) methodology to better understand gene function in the parasitic nematode, B. malayi

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Summary

Introduction

Lymphatic filariasis is a disease caused by filarial nematodes including Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi, transmitted through the bite of infected mosquitoes These parasites perpetuate socioeconomic instability in developing countries by inflicting crippling morbidity and debilitating stigmatization. In an effort to alleviate morbidity and eliminate transmission of this disease, the Global Program for the Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis (GPELF) has orchestrated a systematic mass drug administration (MDA) program centered on the repeated dosing of either diethylcarbamazine citrate (DEC) and albendazole or albendazole and ivermectin in areas where the other filarial parasites, Onchocerca volvulus and Loa loa are coendemic. There is a very real and significant need for additional and more effective antifilarial drugs, and a better understanding of the mode of action of existing drugs [6]

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