AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists studied a parasite called Eimeria falciformis that infects mice to see how it responds to different immune systems in the mice.
  • They looked at the genes (transcriptomes) of both the parasites and the mice to see how they changed depending on the immune strength of the mice.
  • The results showed that the parasite seems to follow a “hard wired” program of infection that doesn’t change much based on the host's immune response, suggesting it has evolved a fixed way to infect mice instead of adapting to their defenses.

Article Abstract

Background: Parasites can either respond to differences in immune defenses that exist between individual hosts plastically or, alternatively, follow a genetically canalized ("hard wired") program of infection. Assuming that large-scale functional plasticity would be discernible in the parasite transcriptome we have performed a dual RNA-seq study of the lifecycle of Eimeria falciformis using infected mice with different immune status as models for coccidian infections.

Results: We compared parasite and host transcriptomes (dual transcriptome) between naïve and challenge infected mice, as well as between immune competent and immune deficient ones. Mice with different immune competence show transcriptional differences as well as differences in parasite reproduction (oocyst shedding). Broad gene categories represented by differently abundant host genes indicate enrichments for immune reaction and tissue repair functions. More specifically, TGF-beta, EGF, TNF and IL-1 and IL-6 are examples of functional annotations represented differently depending on host immune status. Much in contrast, parasite transcriptomes were neither different between Coccidia isolated from immune competent and immune deficient mice, nor between those harvested from naïve and challenge infected mice. Instead, parasite transcriptomes have distinct profiles early and late in infection, characterized largely by biosynthesis or motility associated functional gene groups, respectively. Extracellular sporozoite and oocyst stages showed distinct transcriptional profiles and sporozoite transcriptomes were found enriched for species specific genes and likely pathogenicity factors.

Conclusion: We propose that the niche and host-specific parasite E. falciformis uses a genetically canalized program of infection. This program is likely fixed in an evolutionary process rather than employing phenotypic plasticity to interact with its host. This in turn might limit the potential of the parasite to adapt to new host species or niches, forcing it to coevolve with its host.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5584376PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-017-4095-6DOI Listing

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