Horejsi Rachel V, Nelson Chase N, Ruyter Avery De, Gensch Helen, Maasz-Seawright Saige, Weber Carly, Willett Sophie, Olson Sonja A, Wheeler Nicolas J
Department of Biology, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau Claire, WI.
bioRxiv. 2025 Jul 3:2025.07.02.662618. doi: 10.1101/2025.07.02.662618.
Over 700 million people are at risk of contracting schistosomiasis due to regular exposure to freshwater sources where infected snails, the obligate intermediate hosts of schistosomes, are endemic. Although mass drug administration of praziquantel effectively controls the disease in most regions, achieving elimination will require reducing populations of infected snails that shed the human-infective larval stage. Considerable effort has focused on parasite development and immunological responses after snail penetration, but comparatively little is known about the molecular and behavioral host seeking events that precede it, primarily due to technical and physical constraints. To address this gap, we developed a custom imaging and computational system for tracking and screening schistosome miracidia, the snail-infective larval form that hatches from eggs. Our system employs an array of cameras without magnification and acrylic devices that maintain miracidia within the focal plane, create a field of view over 200,000 times the area of a single miracidium, and support the formation of stable chemical gradients. Using this platform, we perform quantitative ethology of miracidia at an unprecedented scale and extract features that drive the emergent chemoklinokinetic behavior in response to snail cues. We demonstrate that miracidia accumulate at the edge of a gradient of snail cues by increasing key chemoklinokinetic features upon leaving the region of a cue, corroborating previous reports. In contrast, miracidia do not exhibit these behaviors when the cue is uniform, demonstrating that they represent a specific sensory response rather than generic neuromuscular activity. We further find that a previously identified stimulatory snail peptide only partially recapitulates the full chemoklinokinetic profile, and homologues from closely related species elicit divergent behavioral outcomes. Notably, some of these snail peptides can mask a natural gradient and inhibit miracidia penetration of snails. This work establishes a scalable behavioral platform for probing parasite-snail interactions and identifies a peptide scaffold that potently blocks snail penetration.
由于经常接触淡水水源,超过7亿人面临感染血吸虫病的风险,在这些淡水中,受感染的蜗牛(血吸虫的专性中间宿主)呈地方性流行。虽然在大多数地区大规模药物施用吡喹酮可有效控制该病,但要实现消除则需要减少排出人感染性幼虫阶段的受感染蜗牛数量。相当多的努力都集中在蜗牛被侵入后的寄生虫发育和免疫反应上,但对于在此之前的分子和行为宿主寻找事件却知之甚少,主要是由于技术和物理限制。为了填补这一空白,我们开发了一种定制的成像和计算系统,用于追踪和筛选血吸虫毛蚴,即从卵中孵化出的感染蜗牛的幼虫形式。我们的系统采用了一系列无放大功能的摄像头和丙烯酸装置,这些装置可将毛蚴维持在焦平面内,创建一个比单个毛蚴面积大20多万倍的视野,并支持稳定化学梯度的形成。利用这个平台,我们以前所未有的规模对毛蚴进行了定量行为学研究,并提取了驱动其对蜗牛线索产生趋化动力学行为的特征。我们证明,毛蚴通过在离开线索区域时增加关键趋化动力学特征而聚集在蜗牛线索梯度的边缘,这证实了先前的报道。相比之下,当线索均匀时,毛蚴不会表现出这些行为,这表明它们代表一种特定的感官反应而非一般的神经肌肉活动。我们进一步发现,一种先前鉴定出的刺激性蜗牛肽只能部分重现完整的趋化动力学图谱,而来自密切相关物种的同源物会引发不同的行为结果。值得注意的是,其中一些蜗牛肽可以掩盖自然梯度并抑制毛蚴对蜗牛的侵入。这项工作建立了一个可扩展的行为平台,用于探究寄生虫与蜗牛的相互作用,并鉴定出一种能有效阻断蜗牛侵入的肽支架。