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Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms

Schistosomes are obligate helminths responsible for over 218 million cases of human schistosomiasis in 78 countries around the world. Infection occurs when free-swimming cercariae penetrate human skin and initiate developmental progression into parasitic obligate worms that consume red blood cells....

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Autores principales: Hagerty, James R., Jolly, Emmitt R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6816793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31658287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224358
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author Hagerty, James R.
Jolly, Emmitt R.
author_facet Hagerty, James R.
Jolly, Emmitt R.
author_sort Hagerty, James R.
collection PubMed
description Schistosomes are obligate helminths responsible for over 218 million cases of human schistosomiasis in 78 countries around the world. Infection occurs when free-swimming cercariae penetrate human skin and initiate developmental progression into parasitic obligate worms that consume red blood cells. Transcriptomic studies of infectious cercariae reveal abundant mRNAs associated with energy metabolism and host invasion. However, the cercaria is mostly transcriptionally quiescent, suggesting that most mRNAs are primed prior to cercarial escape from the snail host. The use of transcriptomics to understand protein expression presumes that transcription and translation are functionally coupled and the cercarial stage has categorically been treated as a single unit for -omic analysis. Per contra, the relationship between transcription and translation in infectious cercariae has not been described. To understand the correlation between transcription and translation in cercariae, we separately measured nascent translation levels in cercarial heads, cercarial tails and in the developing schistosomula, the next stage of its life cycle. The loss of the cercarial tail is essential for the transformation from a cercaria to a schistosomulum. We observed that translation was initially limited and the translation rate accelerated during the first 72-hours after tail loss. When we tested nascent translation in cercarial heads, cercarial tails, whole cercariae, and 4-hour schistosomula, we found that translation is significantly upregulated in the cercarial tail when compared to the cercarial head and that translation was undetectable in heads using immunofluorescent image quantification (p = .0005). These data represent a major shift in how we understand the cercarial stage. The cercarial head is mostly transcriptionally and translationally quiescent while being sufficient for progression into a schistosomulum. In addition, transcription and translation are not linked in Schistosoma mansoni cercaria. Thus, our current conceptual approach of treating the cercaria as a single functional unit for -omic studies may be insufficient to understand cercarial development.
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spelling pubmed-68167932019-11-03 Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms Hagerty, James R. Jolly, Emmitt R. PLoS One Research Article Schistosomes are obligate helminths responsible for over 218 million cases of human schistosomiasis in 78 countries around the world. Infection occurs when free-swimming cercariae penetrate human skin and initiate developmental progression into parasitic obligate worms that consume red blood cells. Transcriptomic studies of infectious cercariae reveal abundant mRNAs associated with energy metabolism and host invasion. However, the cercaria is mostly transcriptionally quiescent, suggesting that most mRNAs are primed prior to cercarial escape from the snail host. The use of transcriptomics to understand protein expression presumes that transcription and translation are functionally coupled and the cercarial stage has categorically been treated as a single unit for -omic analysis. Per contra, the relationship between transcription and translation in infectious cercariae has not been described. To understand the correlation between transcription and translation in cercariae, we separately measured nascent translation levels in cercarial heads, cercarial tails and in the developing schistosomula, the next stage of its life cycle. The loss of the cercarial tail is essential for the transformation from a cercaria to a schistosomulum. We observed that translation was initially limited and the translation rate accelerated during the first 72-hours after tail loss. When we tested nascent translation in cercarial heads, cercarial tails, whole cercariae, and 4-hour schistosomula, we found that translation is significantly upregulated in the cercarial tail when compared to the cercarial head and that translation was undetectable in heads using immunofluorescent image quantification (p = .0005). These data represent a major shift in how we understand the cercarial stage. The cercarial head is mostly transcriptionally and translationally quiescent while being sufficient for progression into a schistosomulum. In addition, transcription and translation are not linked in Schistosoma mansoni cercaria. Thus, our current conceptual approach of treating the cercaria as a single functional unit for -omic studies may be insufficient to understand cercarial development. Public Library of Science 2019-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6816793/ /pubmed/31658287 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224358 Text en © 2019 Hagerty, Jolly 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
Hagerty, James R.
Jolly, Emmitt R.
Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
title Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
title_full Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
title_fullStr Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
title_full_unstemmed Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
title_short Heads or tails? Differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
title_sort heads or tails? differential translational regulation in cercarial heads and tails of schistosome worms
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6816793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31658287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224358
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