Abstract

Epigenetic mechanisms and chromatin structure play an important role in development. Their impact is therefore expected to be strong in parasites with complex life cycles and multiple, strikingly different, developmental stages, i.e. developmental plasticity. Some studies have already described how the chromatin structure, through histone modifications, varies from a developmental stage to another in a few unicellular parasites. While H3K4me3 profiles remain relatively constant, H3K27 trimethylation and bivalent methylation show strong variation. Inhibitors (A366 and GSK343) of H3K27 histone methyltransferase activity in S. mansoni efficiently blocked miracidium to sporocyst transition indicating that H3K27 trimethylation is required for life cycle progression. As S. mansoni is a multicellular parasite that significantly affects both the health and economy of endemic areas, a better understanding of fluke developmental processes within the definitive host will likely highlight novel disease control strategies. Towards this goal, we also studied H4K20me1 in female cercariae and adults. In particular, we found that bivalent trimethylation of H3K4 and H3K27 at the transcription start site of genes is a landmark of the cercarial stage. In cercariae, H3K27me3 presence and strong enrichment in H4K20me1 over long regions (10–100 kb) is associated with development related genes. Here, we provide a broad overview of the chromatin structure of a metazoan parasite throughout its most important lifecycle stages. The five developmental stages studied here present distinct chromatin structures, indicating that histone methylation plays an important role during development. Hence, components of the histone methylation (and demethylation) machinery may provide suitable Schistosomiasis control targets.

Highlights

  • Parasites often display complex life cycles that involve several hosts and multiple, phenotypically distinct, developmental stages

  • We show that the chromatin structure of five different developmental stages is characterized by specific changes in chemical modifications of histones, basic proteins that are closely associated with DNA

  • A functional role for histone methylation during schistosome development was elucidated by the use of epi-drugs targeting G9a/GLP and EZH2 histone methyltransferase orthologs in S. mansoni

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Summary

Introduction

Parasites often display complex life cycles that involve several hosts and multiple, phenotypically distinct, developmental stages. Several recent studies have shown that epigenetic mechanisms play an important role in the capacity of these parasites to quickly adapt to a different environment and/or host, to alter their phenotypes at several key points of their life cycles and to evade host defenses [2,3,4,5,6,7]. In this manuscript, the term “epigenetics” will be used in the ’molecular’ sense i.e. any change in chromatin structure [8]. This is likely due to the fact that multicellular parasites present a challenge in term of epigenetic analyses, because they are composed of various tissues with each potentially containing a distinct epigenetic signature

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