Vermeire J J, Humphries J E, Yoshino T P
Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2115 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Parasitology. 2005;131 Suppl:S57-70. doi: 10.1017/S0031182005008358.
The multi-host lifestyle of parasitic trematodes necessitates their ability to communicate with their external environment in order to invade and navigate within their hosts' internal environment. Through recent EST and genome sequencing efforts, it has become clear that members of the Trematoda possess many of the elaborate signal transduction systems that have been delineated in other invertebrate model systems like Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans. Gene homologues representing several well-described signal receptor families including receptor tyrosine kinases, receptor serine tyrosine kinases, G protein-coupled receptors and elements of their downstream signalling systems have been identified in larval trematodes. A majority of this work has focused on the blood flukes, Schistosoma spp. and therefore represents a narrow sampling of the diverse digenean helminth taxon. Despite this fact and given the substantial evidence supporting the existence of such signalling systems, the question then becomes, how are these systems employed by larval trematodes to aid them in interpreting signals received from their immediate environment to initiate appropriate responses in cells and tissues comprising the developing parasite stages? High-throughput, genome-wide analysis tools now allow us to begin to functionally characterize genes differentially expressed throughout the development of trematode larvae. Investigation of the systems used by these parasites to receive and transduce external signals may facilitate the creation of technologies for achieving control of intramolluscan schistosome infections and also continue to yield valuable insights into the basic mechanisms regulating motility and behaviour in this important group of helminths.
寄生吸虫的多宿主生活方式使其必须具备与外部环境进行交流的能力,以便在宿主的内部环境中侵入和移动。通过近期的EST和基因组测序工作,已明确吸虫纲成员拥有许多在其他无脊椎动物模型系统(如黑腹果蝇和秀丽隐杆线虫)中已被描述的复杂信号转导系统。在幼虫吸虫中已鉴定出代表几个已充分描述的信号受体家族的基因同源物,包括受体酪氨酸激酶、受体丝氨酸酪氨酸激酶、G蛋白偶联受体及其下游信号系统的元件。这项工作大部分集中在血吸虫属,因此仅代表了复殖吸虫这一多样分类群的狭窄样本。尽管如此,鉴于有大量证据支持此类信号系统的存在,问题就变成了,幼虫吸虫如何利用这些系统来帮助它们解读从其周围环境接收到的信号,从而在构成发育中寄生虫阶段的细胞和组织中引发适当反应?高通量、全基因组分析工具现在使我们能够开始对吸虫幼虫发育过程中差异表达的基因进行功能表征。研究这些寄生虫用于接收和转导外部信号的系统,可能有助于开发控制螺内血吸虫感染的技术,并继续为调节这一重要蠕虫类群运动性和行为的基本机制提供有价值的见解。