Abstract

BackgroundTapeworms are agents of neglected tropical diseases responsible for significant health problems and economic loss. They also exhibit adaptations to a parasitic lifestyle that confound comparisons of their development with other animals. Identifying the genetic factors regulating their complex ontogeny is essential to understanding unique aspects of their biology and for advancing novel therapeutics. Here we use RNA sequencing to identify up-regulated signalling components, transcription factors and post-transcriptional/translational regulators (genes of interest, GOI) in the transcriptomes of Larvae and different regions of segmented worms in the tapeworm Hymenolepis microstoma and combine this with spatial gene expression analyses of a selection of genes.ResultsRNA-seq reads collectively mapped to 90% of the > 12,000 gene models in the H. microstoma v.2 genome assembly, demonstrating that the transcriptome profiles captured a high percentage of predicted genes. Contrasts made between the transcriptomes of Larvae and whole, adult worms, and between the Scolex-Neck, mature strobila and gravid strobila, resulted in 4.5–30% of the genes determined to be differentially expressed. Among these, we identified 190 unique GOI up-regulated in one or more contrasts, including a large range of zinc finger, homeobox and other transcription factors, components of Wnt, Notch, Hedgehog and TGF-β/BMP signalling, and post-transcriptional regulators (e.g. Boule, Pumilio). Heatmap clusterings based on overall expression and on select groups of genes representing ‘signals’ and ‘switches’ showed that expression in the Scolex-Neck region is more similar to that of Larvae than to the mature or gravid regions of the adult worm, which was further reflected in large overlap of up-regulated GOI.ConclusionsSpatial expression analyses in Larvae and adult worms corroborated inferences made from quantitative RNA-seq data and in most cases indicated consistency with canonical roles of the genes in other animals, including free-living flatworms. Recapitulation of developmental factors up-regulated during larval metamorphosis suggests that strobilar growth involves many of the same underlying gene regulatory networks despite the significant disparity in developmental outcomes. The majority of genes identified were investigated in tapeworms for the first time, setting the stage for advancing our understanding of developmental genetics in an important group of flatworm parasites.

Highlights

  • Tapeworms are agents of neglected tropical diseases responsible for significant health problems and economic loss

  • We present an overview of the sample transcriptome profiles and sets of differentially expressed (DE) gene models, and discuss factors examined by Whole-mount in situ hybridisation (WMISH) in detail, using their putative identities and spatial patterns together with published accounts of orthologs in planarians and/or other animals to infer potential roles of the gene products in tapeworms

  • Genes of interest Among the DE gene models with annotations, we identified a total of 189 unique genes of interest’ (GOI) up-regulated in one or more of the contrasts

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Summary

Introduction

Tapeworms are agents of neglected tropical diseases responsible for significant health problems and economic loss. Gene regulatory networks that pattern their axes during growth and regeneration have been elucidated [28], including the seminal discovery of canonical Wnt signalling as the basis for head/tail decision-making [29,30,31] This rapidly growing canon of literature provides an important framework for comparative investigations of gene regulation in other flatworms and will help to ameliorate the historic gulf between the fields of development and parasitology [10]

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