posted on 2017-01-03, 14:56authored byF. O. Hébert, Stephan Grambauer, Iain Barber, C. R. Landry, N. Aubin-Horth
Parasites with complex life cycles have developed numerous phenotypic strategies, closely associated with developmental events, to enable the exploitation of different ecological niches and facilitate transmission between hosts. How these environmental shifts are regulated from a metabolic and physiological standpoint, however, still remain to be fully elucidated. We examined the transcriptomic response of Schistocephalus solidus, a trophically-transmitted parasite with a complex life cycle, over the course of its development in an intermediate host, the threespine stickleback, and the final avian host. Results from our differential gene expression analysis show major reprogramming events among developmental stages. The final host stage is characterized by a strong activation of reproductive pathways and redox homeostasis. The attainment of infectivity in the fish intermediate host - which precedes sexual maturation in the final host and is associated with host behaviour changes - is marked by transcription of genes involved in neural pathways and sensory perception. Our results suggest that un-annotated and S. solidus-specific genes could play a determinant role in host-parasite molecular interactions required to complete the parasite's life cycle. Our results permit future comparative analyses to help disentangle species-specific patterns of infection from conserved mechanisms, ultimately leading to a better understanding of the molecular control and evolution of complex life cycles.
Funding
This work was funded by a FRQ-NT grant to NAH and CRL, a Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Discovery grant to NAH, a NSERC Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship and a Ressources Aquatiques Québec (RAQ) International internship fellowship to FOH, and a UK BBSRC MITBP fellowship to SG. CRL holds the Canada Research Chair in Evolutionary Cell and Systems Biology
History
Citation
Molecular Ecology, 2016
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour