Abstract

The liver fluke, Fasciola hepatica, is a global burden on the wellbeing and productivity of farmed ruminants, and a zoonotic threat to human health. Despite the clear need for accelerated discovery of new drug and vaccine treatments for this pathogen, we still have a relatively limited understanding of liver fluke biology and host interactions. Noncoding RNAs, including micro (mi)RNAs, are key to transcriptional regulation in all eukaryotes, such that an understanding of miRNA biology can shed light on organismal function at a systems level. Four previous publications have reported up to 89 mature miRNA sequences from F. hepatica, but our data show that this does not represent a full account of this species miRNome. We have expanded on previous studies by sequencing, for the first time, miRNAs from multiple life stages (adult, newly excysted juvenile (NEJ), metacercariae and adult-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs)). These experiments detected an additional 61 high-confidence miRNAs, most of which have not been described in any other species, expanding the F. hepatica miRNome to 150 mature sequences. We used quantitative (q)PCR assays to provide the first developmental profile of miRNA expression across metacercariae, NEJ, adult and adult-derived Evs. The majority of miRNAs were expressed most highly in metacercariae, with at least six distinct expression clusters apparent across life stages. Intracellular miRNAs were functionally analyzed to identify target mRNAs with inversely correlated expression in F. hepatica tissue transcriptomes, highlighting regulatory interactions with key virulence transcripts including cathepsin proteases, and neuromuscular genes that control parasite growth, development and motility. We also linked 28 adult-derived EV miRNAs with downregulation of 397 host genes in F. hepatica-infected transcriptomes from ruminant lymph node, peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) and liver tissue transcriptomes. These included genes involved in signal transduction, immune and metabolic pathways, adding to the evidence for miRNA-based immunosuppression during fasciolosis. These data expand our understanding of the F. hepatica miRNome, provide the first data on developmental miRNA regulation in this species, and provide a set of testable hypotheses for functional genomics interrogations of liver fluke miRNA biology.

Highlights

  • Fasciola spp. liver fluke are important flatworm parasites of ruminants, impacting agricultural productivity and animal welfare worldwide, with F. hepatica and F. gigantica found predominantly in temperate and tropical regions respectively

  • We established the previously published miRNome at 89 non-redundant mature F. hepatica miRNA sequences, plus eight F. gigantica miRNAs which we retained for qPCR analysis

  • Ongoing difficulties with parasite control necessitate new control approaches; a clear way to address this need is through improved understanding of fundamental parasite biology and host-parasite interactions

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Summary

Introduction

Fasciola spp. liver fluke are important flatworm parasites of ruminants, impacting agricultural productivity and animal welfare worldwide, with F. hepatica and F. gigantica found predominantly in temperate and tropical regions respectively. Most miRNAs bind to 3prime untranslated region (3’ UTR) of their target transcripts, reducing mRNA stability and leading to downregulation of protein expression (O’Brien et al, 2018) This fundamental process occurs throughout eukaryotes, but our ability to probe and understand it in liver fluke has been hindered by the lack of appropriate functional genomic protocols and an incomplete understanding of the miRNome. Given the miRNA homology shared between F. hepatica and F. gigantica (Hu et al, 2021) this dataset is a useful comparative tool that could yield insights for F. hepatica as well

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