Transcriptomic analysis of reduced sensitivity to praziquantel in Schistosoma mansoni

In this study, we examine the transcriptome of three generations of a laboratory strain of S. mansoni (PR1) whose susceptibility to PZQ has been diminished across 9 passages through exposure to increasing sub-lethal doses of the drug. Miracidial susceptibility was significantly reduced after exposure to 2 x 50 mg/Kg PZQ during the first passage. Susceptibility of worms in vivo was first assessed during passage 5 when mice infected with PZQ-selected schistosomes were dosed with a lethal dose of 3 x 300 mg/kg PZQ resulting in only a 10% reduction in worm number compared to control treatment. The emergence of reduced sensitivity was marked by a shift in sex ratio from a predominantly male to a female population, a reduction in the length of females and ultimately the loss of the PZQ-selected line after passage 9. Analysis of differentially regulated transcripts did not suggest that any particular gene product or pathway was associated with drug resistance suggesting either a loss of function mutation to a single gene or an epistatic interaction of multiple gene products as the underlying cause of reduced susceptibility.Graphical abstractSummarySelection of praziquantel resistance reduces the length of female schistosomes and changes the sex ratio of off-spring to favor females before loss of the line.
Source: Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology - Category: Parasitology Source Type: research