Abstract

BackgroundHuman cryptosporidiosis is caused primarily by two species of apicomplexan protozoa, Cryptosporidium parvum and C. hominis. In cultured cell monolayers, the parasite undergoes two generations of asexual multiplication (merogony). However, the proportion of parasites completing the life-cycle is low and insufficient to sustain continuous propagation. Due to the intracellular location of meronts and later life-cycle stages, oocyst and sporozoites are the only forms of the parasite that can readily be isolated.ResultsResearch on the replicating forms of Cryptosporidium parasites and their interaction with the host cell remains challenging. Based on an RNA-Seq analysis of monolayers of pig epithelial cells infected with C. parvum, here we report on the impact of merogony on the host’s gene regulation. Analysis of the transcriptome of infected and uninfected monolayers demonstrates a significant impact of the infection on host cell gene expression. A total of 813 genes were differentially expressed. Functional terms significantly altered in response to infection include phosphoprotein, RNA binding and acetylation. Upregulation of cell cycle pathways indicates an increase in mitosis. Notably absent from differentially enriched functional categories are stress- and apoptosis-related functions. The comparison of the combined host-parasite transcriptome reveals that C. parvum gene expression is less diverse than the host cell transcriptome and is highly enriched for genes encoding ribosomal functions, such as ribosomal proteins.ConclusionsThese results indicate that C. parvum infection significantly changes host biological functions and provide new insight into gene functions driving early C. parvum intracellular development.

Highlights

  • Human cryptosporidiosis is caused primarily by two species of apicomplexan protozoa, Cryptosporidium parvum and C. hominis

  • The analysis of the transcriptome of cell monolayers infected with C. parvum and uninfected controls revealed cellular functions differentially regulated in response to the infection

  • The comparison of the combined host-parasite transcriptome showed that C. parvum gene expression is less diverse and is highly enriched for genes Received: 8 November 2017 Accepted: 26 February 2018 encoding ribosomal functions

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Summary

Introduction

Human cryptosporidiosis is caused primarily by two species of apicomplexan protozoa, Cryptosporidium parvum and C. hominis. Due to the intracellular location of meronts and later life-cycle stages, oocyst and sporozoites are the only forms of the parasite that can readily be isolated. Cryptosporidiosis in humans is caused primarily by Cryptosporidium parvum and C. hominis (Phylum Apicomplexa). Infection with these protozoans is the secondmost frequent cause of diarrhea in infants living in developing nations [1] and is relatively common in immunocompromised individuals [2, 3]. Studying the interaction of Cryptosporidium parasites with the host cell remains a difficult undertaking. Parasite development is not synchronous, the proportion of infected monolayer cells is variable and difficult to measure.

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