Abstract

In light of the lack of molecular data on the sexual differentiation, maturation and interaction of parasitic nematodes of livestock, the present study investigated sex-specific gene expression in the nodule worm, Oesophagostomum dentatum (Strongylida). Using the technique of RNA arbitrarily-primed polymerase chain reaction (RAP-PCR), 31 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) differentially-displayed between the sexes were cloned. Northern blot analysis proved ten ESTs to be expressed exclusively in males (adults and fourth-stage larvae), while two were expressed solely in female stages. None of the ESTs were expressed in infective third-stage larvae. Sequence analysis and subsequent database searches revealed two male-specific ESTs to have significant similarity to Caenorhabditis elegans (predicted) proteins, a protein containing an EGF-like cysteine motif and a serine/threonine phosphatase. Another two male-specific ESTs had similarity to non-nematode sequences. The two female-specific ESTs had similarity to vitellogenin-5 and endonuclease III (predicted) from C. elegans. The remaining ESTs had no similarity to any nucleic acid or protein sequences contained in the databases. The isolation and characterisation of sex-specific ESTs from O. dentatum provides a unique opportunity for studying the reproductive biology of parasitic nematodes at the molecular level, with a view toward novel approaches for parasite control.

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