Videvall Elin, Cornwallis Charlie K, Ahrén Dag, Palinauskas Vaidas, Valkiūnas Gediminas, Hellgren Olof
Department of Biology, Lund University, Sölvegatan 37, SE-22362, Lund, Sweden.
National Bioinformatics Infrastructure Sweden (NBIS), Lund University, Sölvegatan 37, SE-22362, Lund, Sweden.
Mol Ecol. 2017 Jun;26(11):2939-2958. doi: 10.1111/mec.14085. Epub 2017 Apr 8.
Malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.) include some of the world's most widespread and virulent pathogens. Our knowledge of the molecular mechanisms these parasites use to invade and exploit their hosts other than in mice and primates is, however, extremely limited. It is therefore imperative to characterize transcriptome-wide gene expression from nonmodel malaria parasites and how this varies across individual hosts. Here, we used high-throughput Illumina RNA sequencing on blood from wild-caught Eurasian siskins experimentally infected with a clonal strain of the avian malaria parasite Plasmodium ashfordi (lineage GRW2). Using a bioinformatic multistep approach to filter out host transcripts, we successfully assembled the blood-stage transcriptome of P. ashfordi. A total of 11 954 expressed transcripts were identified, and 7860 were annotated with protein information. We quantified gene expression levels of all parasite transcripts across three hosts during two infection stages - peak and decreasing parasitemia. Interestingly, parasites from the same host displayed remarkably similar expression profiles during different infection stages, but showed large differences across hosts, indicating that P. ashfordi may adjust its gene expression to specific host individuals. We further show that the majority of transcripts are most similar to the human parasite Plasmodium falciparum, and a large number of red blood cell invasion genes were discovered, suggesting evolutionary conserved invasion strategies between mammalian and avian Plasmodium. The transcriptome of P. ashfordi and its host-specific gene expression advances our understanding of Plasmodium plasticity and is a valuable resource as it allows for further studies analysing gene evolution and comparisons of parasite gene expression.
疟原虫(疟原虫属)包括一些世界上传播最广、毒性最强的病原体。然而,我们对这些寄生虫在小鼠和灵长类动物以外的宿主中用于入侵和利用宿主的分子机制的了解极为有限。因此,必须对非模式疟原虫的全转录组基因表达进行表征,以及这种表达在不同个体宿主之间如何变化。在这里,我们对野生捕获的欧亚金翅雀的血液进行了高通量Illumina RNA测序,这些金翅雀经实验感染了鸟类疟原虫阿什福德疟原虫(谱系GRW2)的克隆菌株。我们采用生物信息学多步骤方法过滤掉宿主转录本,成功组装了阿什福德疟原虫的血液阶段转录组。共鉴定出11954个表达转录本,其中7860个被注释了蛋白质信息。我们在两个感染阶段——血虫血症高峰期和下降期,对三个宿主中所有寄生虫转录本的基因表达水平进行了定量。有趣的是,来自同一宿主的寄生虫在不同感染阶段表现出非常相似的表达谱,但在不同宿主之间存在很大差异,这表明阿什福德疟原虫可能会根据特定宿主个体调整其基因表达。我们进一步表明,大多数转录本与人类寄生虫恶性疟原虫最为相似,并且发现了大量红细胞入侵基因,这表明哺乳动物和鸟类疟原虫之间存在进化上保守的入侵策略。阿什福德疟原虫的转录组及其宿主特异性基因表达增进了我们对疟原虫可塑性的理解,并且是一种宝贵的资源,因为它有助于进一步研究分析基因进化以及比较寄生虫基因表达。