Abstract

Signaling or communication between host and parasite may occur over relatively long ranges to enable host finding and acquisition by infective parasitic nematode larvae. Innate behaviors in infective larvae transmitted from the soil that enhance the likelihood of host contact, such as negative geotaxis and hypermotility, are likely mediated by mechanoreception and neuromuscular signaling. Host cues such as vibration of the substratum, elevated temperature, exhaled CO2, and other volatile odorants are perceived by mechanosensory and chemosensory neurons of the amphidial complex. Beyond this, the molecular systems that transduce these external cues within the worm are unknown at this time. Overall, the signal transduction mechanisms that regulate switching between dauer and continuous reproductive development in Caenorhabditis elegans, and doubtless other free-living nematodes, have provided a useful framework for testing hypotheses about how the morphogenesis and development of infective parasitic nematode larvae and the lifespan of adult parasites are regulated. In C. elegans, four major signal transduction pathways, G protein-coupled receptor signaling, insulin/insulin-like growth factor signaling, TGFβ-like signaling and steroid-nuclear hormone receptor signaling govern the switch between dauer and continuous development and regulate adult lifespan. Parasitic nematodes appear to have conserved the functions of G-protein-coupled signaling, insulin-like signaling and steroid-nuclear hormone receptor signaling to regulate larval development before and during the infective process. By contrast, TGFβ-like signaling appears to have been adapted for some other function, perhaps modulation of the host immune response. Of the three signal transduction pathways that appear to regulate development in parasitic nematodes, steroid-nuclear hormone signaling is the most straightforward to manipulate with administered small molecules and may form the basis of new chemotherapeutic strategies. Signaling between parasites and their hosts' immune systems also occurs and serves to modulate these responses to allow chronic infection and down regulate acute inflammatory responses. Knowledge of the precise nature of this signaling may form the basis of immunological interventions to protect against parasitism or related lesions and to alleviate inflammatory diseases of various etiologies.

Highlights

  • On a global scale, parasitic nematodes exact enormous tolls on human health and on animal agriculture and animal welfare [1]

  • Pt-daf-7 from P. trichosuri does not complement a null mutation in C. elegans daf-7 (e1372) [81]. These findings indicate a function for TGFβ signaling in parasitic nematodes that is fundamentally different from that of DAF-7 signaling in C. elegans

  • The mechanisms governing the innate behaviors that orient infective parasitic nematode larvae can only be surmised based on knowledge of the interplay between mechanosensory neurons and muscles involved in progressive motility in C. elegans [98]

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Summary

Introduction

Parasitic nematodes exact enormous tolls on human health and on animal agriculture and animal welfare [1]. C. elegans uses these microtubule cells to receive delocalized mechanical signals such as substrate vibration This system may provide a model of mechanosensory aspects of the infective process in skin-penetrating nematode parasites. Identifying mechanoreceptors in parasitic nematodes and ablating them by microlaser surgery [20, 21] or by cell-specific expression of recombinant lytic factors [22] in an appropriate parasitic nematode model may confirm the role of mechanosensation in innate behaviors that foster host acquisition Another innate behavior that increases the likelihood of skin-penetrating L3i establishing contact is a shift from rest to motile or hypermotile behavior at the approach of a host. Once contact with the host has been established, orientation of larvae from the pelt onto the skin and location of optimal sites

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