Faculty of Science, School of Life Sciences, The University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW, Australia.
Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology, School of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW, Australia.
Front Immunol. 2021 Jan 29;11:608686. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.608686. eCollection 2020.
Understanding mechanisms by which parasitic worms (helminths) control their hosts' immune responses is critical to the development of effective new disease interventions. , a global scourge of humans and their livestock, suppresses host innate immune responses within hours of infection, ensuring that host protective responses are quickly incapacitated. This allows the parasite to freely migrate from the intestine, through the liver to ultimately reside in the bile duct, where the parasite establishes a chronic infection that is largely tolerated by the host. The recent identification of micro(mi)RNA, small RNAs that regulate gene expression, within the extracellular vesicles secreted by helminths suggest that these non-coding RNAs may have a role in the parasite-host interplay. To date, 77 miRNAs have been identified in comprising primarily of ancient conserved species of miRNAs. We hypothesized that many of these miRNAs are utilized by the parasite to regulate host immune signaling pathways. To test this theory, we first compiled all of the known published miRNAs and critically curated their sequences and annotations. Then with a focus on the miRNAs expressed by the juvenile worms, we predicted gene targets within human innate immune cells. This approach revealed the existence of targets within every immune cell, providing evidence for the universal management of host immunology by this parasite. Notably, there was a high degree of redundancy in the potential for the parasite to regulate the activation of dendritic cells, eosinophils and neutrophils, with multiple miRNAs predicted to act on singular gene targets within these cells. This original exploration of the miRnome offers the first molecular insight into mechanisms by which can regulate the host protective immune response.
了解寄生虫(蠕虫)控制宿主免疫反应的机制对于开发有效的新疾病干预措施至关重要。旋毛虫是人类及其牲畜的全球性祸害,它在感染后数小时内抑制宿主先天免疫反应,确保宿主的保护反应迅速失效。这使得寄生虫能够自由地从肠道迁移,通过肝脏最终驻留在胆管中,在那里寄生虫建立了一种慢性感染,宿主在很大程度上容忍了这种感染。最近在寄生虫分泌的细胞外囊泡中发现了 micro(mi)RNA,即调节基因表达的小 RNA,表明这些非编码 RNA 可能在寄生虫-宿主相互作用中发挥作用。迄今为止,在旋毛形线虫中已经鉴定出 77 种 miRNA,主要由古老的保守 miRNA 组成。我们假设这些 miRNA 中的许多被寄生虫用来调节宿主免疫信号通路。为了验证这一理论,我们首先编译了所有已知发表的旋毛虫 miRNAs,并对其序列和注释进行了严格的整理。然后,我们专注于幼虫表达的 miRNAs,预测人类先天免疫细胞中的基因靶标。这种方法揭示了每个免疫细胞中都存在靶标,为寄生虫对宿主免疫学的普遍管理提供了证据。值得注意的是,寄生虫调节树突状细胞、嗜酸性粒细胞和中性粒细胞激活的潜力具有高度的冗余性,多个 miRNA 被预测作用于这些细胞中的单个基因靶标。对 miRnome 的这一原始探索首次提供了旋毛虫调节宿主保护性免疫反应的机制的分子见解。