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TGF-beta signaling controls
embryo development in the parasitic flatworm Schistosoma
mansoni
Freitas TC, Jung E and EJ Pearce. (2007) PLoS Pathogens
3: e52.
Over 200 million people have, and another 600 million are at
risk of contracting, schistosomiasis, one of the major neglected
tropical diseases. Transmission of this infection, which is
caused by helminth parasites of the genus Schistosoma, depends
upon the release of parasite eggs from the human host. However,
approximately 50% of eggs produced by schistosomes fail to
reach the external environment, but instead become trapped
in host tissues where pathological changes caused by the immune
responses to secreted egg antigens precipitate disease. Despite
the central importance of egg production in transmission and
disease, relatively little is understood of the molecular processes
underlying the development of this key life stage in schistosomes.
Here, we describe a novel parasite-encoded TGF-beta superfamily
member, Schistosoma mansoni Inhibin/Activin (SmInAct), which
is key to this process. In situ hybridization localizes SmInAct
expression to the reproductive tissues of the adult female,
and real-time RT-PCR analyses indicate that SmInAct is abundantly
expressed in ovipositing females and the eggs they produce.
Based on real-time RT-PCR analyses, SmInAct transcription continues,
albeit at a reduced level, both in adult worms isolated from
single-sex infections, where reproduction is absent, and in
parasites from IL-7R(-/-) mice, in which viable egg production
is severely compromised. Nevertheless, Western analyses demonstrate
that SmInAct protein is undetectable in parasites from single-sex
infections and from infections of IL-7R(-/-) mice, suggesting
that SmInAct expression is tightly linked to the reproductive
potential of the worms. A crucial role for SmInAct in successful
embryogenesis is indicated by the finding that RNA interference-mediated
knockdown of SmInAct expression in eggs aborts their development.
Our results demonstrate that TGF-beta signaling plays a major
role in the embryogenesis of a metazoan parasite, and have
implications for the development of new strategies for the
treatment and prevention of an important and neglected human
disease.
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