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RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro

BACKGROUND: Fasciola spp. liver fluke cause pernicious disease in humans and animals. Whilst current control is unsustainable due to anthelmintic resistance, gene silencing (RNA interference, RNAi) has the potential to contribute to functional validation of new therapeutic targets. The susceptibilit...

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Autores principales: McVeigh, Paul, McCammick, Erin M., McCusker, Paul, Morphew, Russell M., Mousley, Angela, Abidi, Abbas, Saifullah, Khalid M., Muthusamy, Raman, Gopalakrishnan, Ravikumar, Spithill, Terry W., Dalton, John P., Brophy, Peter M., Marks, Nikki J., Maule, Aaron G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177864/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25254508
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003185
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author McVeigh, Paul
McCammick, Erin M.
McCusker, Paul
Morphew, Russell M.
Mousley, Angela
Abidi, Abbas
Saifullah, Khalid M.
Muthusamy, Raman
Gopalakrishnan, Ravikumar
Spithill, Terry W.
Dalton, John P.
Brophy, Peter M.
Marks, Nikki J.
Maule, Aaron G.
author_facet McVeigh, Paul
McCammick, Erin M.
McCusker, Paul
Morphew, Russell M.
Mousley, Angela
Abidi, Abbas
Saifullah, Khalid M.
Muthusamy, Raman
Gopalakrishnan, Ravikumar
Spithill, Terry W.
Dalton, John P.
Brophy, Peter M.
Marks, Nikki J.
Maule, Aaron G.
author_sort McVeigh, Paul
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Fasciola spp. liver fluke cause pernicious disease in humans and animals. Whilst current control is unsustainable due to anthelmintic resistance, gene silencing (RNA interference, RNAi) has the potential to contribute to functional validation of new therapeutic targets. The susceptibility of juvenile Fasciola hepatica to double stranded (ds)RNA-induced RNAi has been reported. To exploit this we probe RNAi dynamics, penetrance and persistence with the aim of building a robust platform for reverse genetics in liver fluke. We describe development of standardised RNAi protocols for a commercially-available liver fluke strain (the US Pacific North West Wild Strain), validated via robust transcriptional silencing of seven virulence genes, with in-depth experimental optimisation of three: cathepsin L (FheCatL) and B (FheCatB) cysteine proteases, and a σ-class glutathione transferase (FheσGST). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Robust transcriptional silencing of targets in both F. hepatica and Fasciola gigantica juveniles is achievable following exposure to long (200–320 nt) dsRNAs or 27 nt short interfering (si)RNAs. Although juveniles are highly RNAi-susceptible, they display slower transcript and protein knockdown dynamics than those reported previously. Knockdown was detectable following as little as 4h exposure to trigger (target-dependent) and in all cases silencing persisted for ≥25 days following long dsRNA exposure. Combinatorial silencing of three targets by mixing multiple long dsRNAs was similarly efficient. Despite profound transcriptional suppression, we found a significant time-lag before the occurrence of protein suppression; FheσGST and FheCatL protein suppression were only detectable after 9 and 21 days, respectively. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In spite of marked variation in knockdown dynamics, we find that a transient exposure to long dsRNA or siRNA triggers robust RNAi penetrance and persistence in liver fluke NEJs supporting the development of multiple-throughput phenotypic screens for control target validation. RNAi persistence in fluke encourages in vivo studies on gene function using worms exposed to RNAi-triggers prior to infection.
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spelling pubmed-41778642014-10-02 RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro McVeigh, Paul McCammick, Erin M. McCusker, Paul Morphew, Russell M. Mousley, Angela Abidi, Abbas Saifullah, Khalid M. Muthusamy, Raman Gopalakrishnan, Ravikumar Spithill, Terry W. Dalton, John P. Brophy, Peter M. Marks, Nikki J. Maule, Aaron G. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Fasciola spp. liver fluke cause pernicious disease in humans and animals. Whilst current control is unsustainable due to anthelmintic resistance, gene silencing (RNA interference, RNAi) has the potential to contribute to functional validation of new therapeutic targets. The susceptibility of juvenile Fasciola hepatica to double stranded (ds)RNA-induced RNAi has been reported. To exploit this we probe RNAi dynamics, penetrance and persistence with the aim of building a robust platform for reverse genetics in liver fluke. We describe development of standardised RNAi protocols for a commercially-available liver fluke strain (the US Pacific North West Wild Strain), validated via robust transcriptional silencing of seven virulence genes, with in-depth experimental optimisation of three: cathepsin L (FheCatL) and B (FheCatB) cysteine proteases, and a σ-class glutathione transferase (FheσGST). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Robust transcriptional silencing of targets in both F. hepatica and Fasciola gigantica juveniles is achievable following exposure to long (200–320 nt) dsRNAs or 27 nt short interfering (si)RNAs. Although juveniles are highly RNAi-susceptible, they display slower transcript and protein knockdown dynamics than those reported previously. Knockdown was detectable following as little as 4h exposure to trigger (target-dependent) and in all cases silencing persisted for ≥25 days following long dsRNA exposure. Combinatorial silencing of three targets by mixing multiple long dsRNAs was similarly efficient. Despite profound transcriptional suppression, we found a significant time-lag before the occurrence of protein suppression; FheσGST and FheCatL protein suppression were only detectable after 9 and 21 days, respectively. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In spite of marked variation in knockdown dynamics, we find that a transient exposure to long dsRNA or siRNA triggers robust RNAi penetrance and persistence in liver fluke NEJs supporting the development of multiple-throughput phenotypic screens for control target validation. RNAi persistence in fluke encourages in vivo studies on gene function using worms exposed to RNAi-triggers prior to infection. Public Library of Science 2014-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4177864/ /pubmed/25254508 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003185 Text en © 2014 McVeigh et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
McVeigh, Paul
McCammick, Erin M.
McCusker, Paul
Morphew, Russell M.
Mousley, Angela
Abidi, Abbas
Saifullah, Khalid M.
Muthusamy, Raman
Gopalakrishnan, Ravikumar
Spithill, Terry W.
Dalton, John P.
Brophy, Peter M.
Marks, Nikki J.
Maule, Aaron G.
RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro
title RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro
title_full RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro
title_fullStr RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro
title_full_unstemmed RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro
title_short RNAi Dynamics in Juvenile Fasciola spp. Liver Flukes Reveals the Persistence of Gene Silencing In Vitro
title_sort rnai dynamics in juvenile fasciola spp. liver flukes reveals the persistence of gene silencing in vitro
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177864/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25254508
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003185
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