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Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction

Selective pressures between hosts and their parasites can result in reciprocal evolution or adaptation of specific life history traits. Local adaptation of resident hosts and parasites should lead to increase parasite infectivity/virulence (higher compatibility) when infecting hosts from the same lo...

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Autores principales: Portet, Anaïs, Pinaud, Silvain, Chaparro, Cristian, Galinier, Richard, Dheilly, Nolwenn M., Portela, Julien, Charriere, Guillaume M., Allienne, Jean-François, Duval, David, Gourbal, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6443186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30893368
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007647
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author Portet, Anaïs
Pinaud, Silvain
Chaparro, Cristian
Galinier, Richard
Dheilly, Nolwenn M.
Portela, Julien
Charriere, Guillaume M.
Allienne, Jean-François
Duval, David
Gourbal, Benjamin
author_facet Portet, Anaïs
Pinaud, Silvain
Chaparro, Cristian
Galinier, Richard
Dheilly, Nolwenn M.
Portela, Julien
Charriere, Guillaume M.
Allienne, Jean-François
Duval, David
Gourbal, Benjamin
author_sort Portet, Anaïs
collection PubMed
description Selective pressures between hosts and their parasites can result in reciprocal evolution or adaptation of specific life history traits. Local adaptation of resident hosts and parasites should lead to increase parasite infectivity/virulence (higher compatibility) when infecting hosts from the same location (in sympatry) than from a foreign location (in allopatry). Analysis of geographic variations in compatibility phenotypes is the most common proxy used to infer local adaptation. However, in some cases, allopatric host-parasite systems demonstrate similar or greater compatibility than in sympatry. In such cases, the potential for local adaptation remains unclear. Here, we study the interaction between Schistosoma and its vector snail Biomphalaria in which such discrepancy in local versus foreign compatibility phenotype has been reported. Herein, we aim at bridging this gap of knowledge by comparing life history traits (immune cellular response, host mortality, and parasite growth) and molecular responses in highly compatible sympatric and allopatric Schistosoma/Biomphalaria interactions originating from different geographic localities (Brazil, Venezuela and Burundi). We found that despite displaying similar prevalence phenotypes, sympatric schistosomes triggered a rapid immune suppression (dual-RNAseq analyses) in the snails within 24h post infection, whereas infection by allopatric schistosomes (regardless of the species) was associated with immune cell proliferation and triggered a non-specific generalized immune response after 96h. We observed that, sympatric schistosomes grow more rapidly. Finally, we identify miRNAs differentially expressed by Schistosoma mansoni that target host immune genes and could be responsible for hijacking the host immune response during the sympatric interaction. We show that despite having similar prevalence phenotypes, sympatric and allopatric snail-Schistosoma interactions displayed strong differences in their immunobiological molecular dialogue. Understanding the mechanisms allowing parasites to adapt rapidly and efficiently to new hosts is critical to control disease emergence and risks of Schistosomiasis outbreaks.
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spelling pubmed-64431862019-04-17 Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction Portet, Anaïs Pinaud, Silvain Chaparro, Cristian Galinier, Richard Dheilly, Nolwenn M. Portela, Julien Charriere, Guillaume M. Allienne, Jean-François Duval, David Gourbal, Benjamin PLoS Pathog Research Article Selective pressures between hosts and their parasites can result in reciprocal evolution or adaptation of specific life history traits. Local adaptation of resident hosts and parasites should lead to increase parasite infectivity/virulence (higher compatibility) when infecting hosts from the same location (in sympatry) than from a foreign location (in allopatry). Analysis of geographic variations in compatibility phenotypes is the most common proxy used to infer local adaptation. However, in some cases, allopatric host-parasite systems demonstrate similar or greater compatibility than in sympatry. In such cases, the potential for local adaptation remains unclear. Here, we study the interaction between Schistosoma and its vector snail Biomphalaria in which such discrepancy in local versus foreign compatibility phenotype has been reported. Herein, we aim at bridging this gap of knowledge by comparing life history traits (immune cellular response, host mortality, and parasite growth) and molecular responses in highly compatible sympatric and allopatric Schistosoma/Biomphalaria interactions originating from different geographic localities (Brazil, Venezuela and Burundi). We found that despite displaying similar prevalence phenotypes, sympatric schistosomes triggered a rapid immune suppression (dual-RNAseq analyses) in the snails within 24h post infection, whereas infection by allopatric schistosomes (regardless of the species) was associated with immune cell proliferation and triggered a non-specific generalized immune response after 96h. We observed that, sympatric schistosomes grow more rapidly. Finally, we identify miRNAs differentially expressed by Schistosoma mansoni that target host immune genes and could be responsible for hijacking the host immune response during the sympatric interaction. We show that despite having similar prevalence phenotypes, sympatric and allopatric snail-Schistosoma interactions displayed strong differences in their immunobiological molecular dialogue. Understanding the mechanisms allowing parasites to adapt rapidly and efficiently to new hosts is critical to control disease emergence and risks of Schistosomiasis outbreaks. Public Library of Science 2019-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6443186/ /pubmed/30893368 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007647 Text en © 2019 Portet 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Portet, Anaïs
Pinaud, Silvain
Chaparro, Cristian
Galinier, Richard
Dheilly, Nolwenn M.
Portela, Julien
Charriere, Guillaume M.
Allienne, Jean-François
Duval, David
Gourbal, Benjamin
Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction
title Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction
title_full Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction
title_fullStr Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction
title_full_unstemmed Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction
title_short Sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in Biomphalaria / Schistosoma interaction
title_sort sympatric versus allopatric evolutionary contexts shape differential immune response in biomphalaria / schistosoma interaction
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6443186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30893368
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007647
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