Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates

Abstract Background The clinical symptoms of malaria are caused by the asexual replication of Plasmodium parasites in the blood of the vertebrate host. To spread to new hosts, however, the malaria parasite must differentiate into sexual forms, termed gametocytes, which are ingested by a mosquito vec...

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Main Authors: Lee M. Yeoh, Christopher D. Goodman, Vanessa Mollard, Geoffrey I. McFadden, Stuart A. Ralph
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-09-01
Series:BMC Genomics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-017-4100-0
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spelling doaj-f76e78041ab94757b0e61b808507900c2020-11-25T00:45:39ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642017-09-0118111610.1186/s12864-017-4100-0Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolatesLee M. Yeoh0Christopher D. Goodman1Vanessa Mollard2Geoffrey I. McFadden3Stuart A. Ralph4Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Bio21 Molecular Science and Biotechnology InstituteSchool of BioSciencesSchool of BioSciencesSchool of BioSciencesDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Bio21 Molecular Science and Biotechnology InstituteAbstract Background The clinical symptoms of malaria are caused by the asexual replication of Plasmodium parasites in the blood of the vertebrate host. To spread to new hosts, however, the malaria parasite must differentiate into sexual forms, termed gametocytes, which are ingested by a mosquito vector. Sexual differentiation produces either female or male gametocytes, and involves significant morphological and biochemical changes. These transformations prepare gametocytes for the rapid progression to gamete formation and fertilisation, which occur within 20 min of ingestion. Here we present the transcriptomes of asexual, female, and male gametocytes in P. berghei, and a comprehensive statistically-based differential-expression analysis of the transcriptional changes that underpin this sexual differentiation. Results RNA-seq analysis revealed numerous differences in the transcriptomes of female and male gametocytes compared to asexual stages. Overall, there is net downregulation of transcripts in gametocytes compared to asexual stages, with this trend more marked in female gametocytes. Our analysis identified transcriptional changes in previously-characterised gametocyte-specific pathways, which validated our approach. We also detected many previously-unreported female- and male-specific pathways and genes. Transcriptional biases in stage and gender were then used to investigate sex-specificity and sexual dimorphism of Plasmodium in an evolutionary context. Sex-related gene expression is well conserved between Plasmodium species, but relatively poorly conserved in related organisms outside this genus. This pattern of conservation is most evident in genes necessary for both male and female gametocyte formation. However, this trend is less pronounced for male-specific genes, which are more highly conserved outside the genus than genes specific to female development. Conclusions We characterised the transcriptional changes that are integral to the development of the female and male sexual forms of Plasmodium. These differential-expression patterns provide a vital insight into understanding the gender-specific characteristics of this essential stage that is the primary target for treatments that block parasite transmission. Our results also offer insight into the evolution of sex genes through Alveolata, and suggest that many Plasmodium sex genes evolved within the genus. We further hypothesise that male gametocytes co-opted pre-existing cellular machinery in their evolutionary history, whereas female gametocytes evolved more through the development of novel, parasite-specific pathways.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-017-4100-0PlasmodiumPlasmodium bergheiMalariaGametocyteTranscriptomeRNA-seq
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lee M. Yeoh
Christopher D. Goodman
Vanessa Mollard
Geoffrey I. McFadden
Stuart A. Ralph
spellingShingle Lee M. Yeoh
Christopher D. Goodman
Vanessa Mollard
Geoffrey I. McFadden
Stuart A. Ralph
Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
BMC Genomics
Plasmodium
Plasmodium berghei
Malaria
Gametocyte
Transcriptome
RNA-seq
author_facet Lee M. Yeoh
Christopher D. Goodman
Vanessa Mollard
Geoffrey I. McFadden
Stuart A. Ralph
author_sort Lee M. Yeoh
title Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
title_short Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
title_full Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
title_fullStr Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
title_full_unstemmed Comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in Plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
title_sort comparative transcriptomics of female and male gametocytes in plasmodium berghei and the evolution of sex in alveolates
publisher BMC
series BMC Genomics
issn 1471-2164
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract Background The clinical symptoms of malaria are caused by the asexual replication of Plasmodium parasites in the blood of the vertebrate host. To spread to new hosts, however, the malaria parasite must differentiate into sexual forms, termed gametocytes, which are ingested by a mosquito vector. Sexual differentiation produces either female or male gametocytes, and involves significant morphological and biochemical changes. These transformations prepare gametocytes for the rapid progression to gamete formation and fertilisation, which occur within 20 min of ingestion. Here we present the transcriptomes of asexual, female, and male gametocytes in P. berghei, and a comprehensive statistically-based differential-expression analysis of the transcriptional changes that underpin this sexual differentiation. Results RNA-seq analysis revealed numerous differences in the transcriptomes of female and male gametocytes compared to asexual stages. Overall, there is net downregulation of transcripts in gametocytes compared to asexual stages, with this trend more marked in female gametocytes. Our analysis identified transcriptional changes in previously-characterised gametocyte-specific pathways, which validated our approach. We also detected many previously-unreported female- and male-specific pathways and genes. Transcriptional biases in stage and gender were then used to investigate sex-specificity and sexual dimorphism of Plasmodium in an evolutionary context. Sex-related gene expression is well conserved between Plasmodium species, but relatively poorly conserved in related organisms outside this genus. This pattern of conservation is most evident in genes necessary for both male and female gametocyte formation. However, this trend is less pronounced for male-specific genes, which are more highly conserved outside the genus than genes specific to female development. Conclusions We characterised the transcriptional changes that are integral to the development of the female and male sexual forms of Plasmodium. These differential-expression patterns provide a vital insight into understanding the gender-specific characteristics of this essential stage that is the primary target for treatments that block parasite transmission. Our results also offer insight into the evolution of sex genes through Alveolata, and suggest that many Plasmodium sex genes evolved within the genus. We further hypothesise that male gametocytes co-opted pre-existing cellular machinery in their evolutionary history, whereas female gametocytes evolved more through the development of novel, parasite-specific pathways.
topic Plasmodium
Plasmodium berghei
Malaria
Gametocyte
Transcriptome
RNA-seq
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-017-4100-0
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