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Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode

The antiparasitic drug ivermectin plays an essential role in human and animal health globally. However, ivermectin resistance is widespread in veterinary helminths and there are growing concerns of sub-optimal responses to treatment in related helminths of humans. Despite decades of research, the ge...

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Autores principales: Laing, Roz, Doyle, Stephen R., McIntyre, Jennifer, Maitland, Kirsty, Morrison, Alison, Bartley, David J., Kaplan, Ray, Chaudhry, Umer, Sargison, Neil, Tait, Andy, Cotton, James A., Britton, Collette, Devaney, Eileen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9232149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35696434
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010545
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author Laing, Roz
Doyle, Stephen R.
McIntyre, Jennifer
Maitland, Kirsty
Morrison, Alison
Bartley, David J.
Kaplan, Ray
Chaudhry, Umer
Sargison, Neil
Tait, Andy
Cotton, James A.
Britton, Collette
Devaney, Eileen
author_facet Laing, Roz
Doyle, Stephen R.
McIntyre, Jennifer
Maitland, Kirsty
Morrison, Alison
Bartley, David J.
Kaplan, Ray
Chaudhry, Umer
Sargison, Neil
Tait, Andy
Cotton, James A.
Britton, Collette
Devaney, Eileen
author_sort Laing, Roz
collection PubMed
description The antiparasitic drug ivermectin plays an essential role in human and animal health globally. However, ivermectin resistance is widespread in veterinary helminths and there are growing concerns of sub-optimal responses to treatment in related helminths of humans. Despite decades of research, the genetic mechanisms underlying ivermectin resistance are poorly understood in parasitic helminths. This reflects significant uncertainty regarding the mode of action of ivermectin in parasitic helminths, and the genetic complexity of these organisms; parasitic helminths have large, rapidly evolving genomes and differences in evolutionary history and genetic background can confound comparisons between resistant and susceptible populations. We undertook a controlled genetic cross of a multi-drug resistant and a susceptible reference isolate of Haemonchus contortus, an economically important gastrointestinal nematode of sheep, and ivermectin-selected the F2 population for comparison with an untreated F2 control. RNA-seq analyses of male and female adults of all populations identified high transcriptomic differentiation between parental isolates, which was significantly reduced in the F2, allowing differences associated specifically with ivermectin resistance to be identified. In all resistant populations, there was constitutive upregulation of a single gene, HCON_00155390:cky-1, a putative pharyngeal-expressed transcription factor, in a narrow locus on chromosome V previously shown to be under ivermectin selection. In addition, we detected sex-specific differences in gene expression between resistant and susceptible populations, including constitutive upregulation of a P-glycoprotein, HCON_00162780:pgp-11, in resistant males only. After ivermectin selection, we identified differential expression of genes with roles in neuronal function and chloride homeostasis, which is consistent with an adaptive response to ivermectin-induced hyperpolarisation of neuromuscular cells. Overall, we show the utility of a genetic cross to identify differences in gene expression that are specific to ivermectin selection and provide a framework to better understand ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in parasitic helminths.
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spelling pubmed-92321492022-06-25 Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode Laing, Roz Doyle, Stephen R. McIntyre, Jennifer Maitland, Kirsty Morrison, Alison Bartley, David J. Kaplan, Ray Chaudhry, Umer Sargison, Neil Tait, Andy Cotton, James A. Britton, Collette Devaney, Eileen PLoS Pathog Research Article The antiparasitic drug ivermectin plays an essential role in human and animal health globally. However, ivermectin resistance is widespread in veterinary helminths and there are growing concerns of sub-optimal responses to treatment in related helminths of humans. Despite decades of research, the genetic mechanisms underlying ivermectin resistance are poorly understood in parasitic helminths. This reflects significant uncertainty regarding the mode of action of ivermectin in parasitic helminths, and the genetic complexity of these organisms; parasitic helminths have large, rapidly evolving genomes and differences in evolutionary history and genetic background can confound comparisons between resistant and susceptible populations. We undertook a controlled genetic cross of a multi-drug resistant and a susceptible reference isolate of Haemonchus contortus, an economically important gastrointestinal nematode of sheep, and ivermectin-selected the F2 population for comparison with an untreated F2 control. RNA-seq analyses of male and female adults of all populations identified high transcriptomic differentiation between parental isolates, which was significantly reduced in the F2, allowing differences associated specifically with ivermectin resistance to be identified. In all resistant populations, there was constitutive upregulation of a single gene, HCON_00155390:cky-1, a putative pharyngeal-expressed transcription factor, in a narrow locus on chromosome V previously shown to be under ivermectin selection. In addition, we detected sex-specific differences in gene expression between resistant and susceptible populations, including constitutive upregulation of a P-glycoprotein, HCON_00162780:pgp-11, in resistant males only. After ivermectin selection, we identified differential expression of genes with roles in neuronal function and chloride homeostasis, which is consistent with an adaptive response to ivermectin-induced hyperpolarisation of neuromuscular cells. Overall, we show the utility of a genetic cross to identify differences in gene expression that are specific to ivermectin selection and provide a framework to better understand ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in parasitic helminths. Public Library of Science 2022-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9232149/ /pubmed/35696434 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010545 Text en © 2022 Laing et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Laing, Roz
Doyle, Stephen R.
McIntyre, Jennifer
Maitland, Kirsty
Morrison, Alison
Bartley, David J.
Kaplan, Ray
Chaudhry, Umer
Sargison, Neil
Tait, Andy
Cotton, James A.
Britton, Collette
Devaney, Eileen
Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
title Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
title_full Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
title_fullStr Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
title_short Transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
title_sort transcriptomic analyses implicate neuronal plasticity and chloride homeostasis in ivermectin resistance and response to treatment in a parasitic nematode
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9232149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35696434
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010545
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