Snail-borne parasitic diseases represent an important challenge to human and animal health. Control strategies that target the intermediate snail host has proved very effective. Epigenetic mechanisms are involved in developmental processes and therefore play a fundamental role in developmental variation. DNA methylation is an important epigenetic information carrier in eukaryotes that plays a major role in the control of chromatin structure. Epigenome editing tools have been instrumental to demonstrate functional importance of this mark for gene expression in vertebrates. In invertebrates, such tools are missing, and the role of DNA methylation remains unknown. Here we demonstrate that methylome engineering can be used to modify the CpG methylation level of a target gene in the freshwater snail intermediate host of the human parasite . We used a dCas9-SunTag-DNMT3A complex and synthetic sgRNA to transfect embryos and observed an increase of CpG methylation at the target site in 50% of the hatching snails.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.794650 | DOI Listing |
PLoS Negl Trop Dis
December 2024
College of Medicine and Health Sciences, School of Health Sciences, University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda.
Background: Schistosomiasis is an important snail-borne parasitic disease whose transmission is exacerbated by water resource management activities. In Rwanda, meeting the growing population's demand for food has led to wetlands reclamation for cultivation and increased agrochemical enrichment for crop production. However, the ecological consequences of agrochemical enrichment on schistosomiasis transmission remain unexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathogens
October 2024
Institute of Parasitology, Biomedical Research Center Seltersberg (BFS), Justus Liebig University Giessen, 35392 Giessen, Germany.
is a metastrongyloid lungworm causing severe cardiovascular disease in domestic and wild animals. During its heteroxenous life cycle, requires obligate gastropod intermediate hosts. Little is known about larval organ tropism and development in gastropod intermediate hosts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Infect Dis
November 2024
National Health Commission Key Laboratory of Parasitic Disease Control and Prevention, Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory On Parasite and Vector Control Technology, Jiangsu Provincial Medical Key Laboratory, Jiangsu Institute of Parasitic Diseases, Wuxi, 214064, Jiangsu, China.
Sci Total Environ
December 2024
Laboratory of Animal Ecology, Global Change and Sustainable Development, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Water Research Group, Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management, North-West University, South Africa.
Trop Med Health
September 2024
VITROME, Campus International IRD-UCAD de L'IRD, 1386, Dakar, Senegal.
Background: Freshwater snails are the first obligatory intermediate hosts in the trematode life cycle. Several parasitic diseases transmitted by these snails are endemic in Africa, and their distribution closely follows that of the intermediate hosts. These diseases represent a major public health problem and cause significant socio-economic losses in Africa, particularly schistosomiasis and fascioliasis.
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