Abstract
In recent decades, numerous studies have sought to better understand the mechanisms underlying the compatibility between Biomphalaria glabrata and Schistosoma mansoni. The developments of comparative transcriptomics, comparative genomics, interactomics and more targeted approaches have enabled researchers to identify a series of candidate genes. However, no molecular comparative work has yet been performed on multiple populations displaying different levels of compatibility. Here, we seek to fill this gap in the literature. We focused on B. glabrata FREPs and S. mansoni SmPoMucs, which were previously demonstrated to be involved in snail/schistosome compatibility. We studied the expression and polymorphisms of these factors in combinations of snail and schistosome isolates that display different levels of compatibility. We found that the polymorphism and expression levels of FREPs and SmPoMucs could be linked to the compatibility level of S. mansoni. These data and our complementary results obtained by RNA-seq of samples from various snail strains indicate that the mechanism of compatibility is much more complex than previously thought, and that it is likely to be highly variable within and between populations. This complexity must be taken into account if we hope to identify the molecular pathways that are most likely to be good targets for strategies aimed at blocking transmission of the parasite through the snail intermediate host.
Author summary
Schistosomiasis is the second most widespread human tropical parasitic disease after malaria. It is caused by flatworms of the genus Schistosoma, and poses a considerable threat for human health in numerous Asian, African and South American countries. The World Health Organization has set the goal of eradicating schistosomiasis by 2025. However, no vaccine is available, and we currently have only one drug (praziquantel) that can effectively and efficiently treat the disease. As treatment by mass drug administration would enhance the risk of drug resistance in schistosome parasites, complementary strategies to fight this parasitic disease are urgently needed. Freshwater snails of the Biomphalaria genus act as intermediate hosts in the transmission of the schistosome species. Thus, learning more about the mechanisms of the interaction between these snails and the schistosomes could critically facilitate the identification of potential new candidate molecules that may be targeted to prevent schistosome transmission in the field.
Introduction
Schistosomes are the causative agents of schistosomiasis, which is one of the most important neglected human tropical diseases in the world. Schistosomes infect over 200 million people worldwide, causing both acute and chronic debilitating diseases [1,2]. There is no effective vaccine against schistosomes, and the treatment of schistosomiasis still relies on a single drug: praziquantel [3]. Praziquantel resistance can be easily selected experimentally [4], and some human populations subjected to mass treatment now show evidence of reduced drug susceptibility [5]. Thus, we need alternate control strategies. Toward this end, researchers have sought to block disease transmission at the level of the snail that acts as the intermediate host. However, if we hope to identify target genes that may be used to develop new strategies aimed at disrupting the transmission of schistosomiasis, we must decipher the mechanisms through which snails and schistosomes interact. Over the past four decades, numerous investigators have sought to understand these mechanisms by focusing on the interaction between Biomphalaria glabrata and Schistosoma mansoni, which was chosen as a model system.
The genetic determinism of the compatibility between B. glabrata and S. mansoni was clearly demonstrated by the C.S. Richards group in the 1970s [6,7]. Since then, several research groups have investigated the underlying molecular determinants using different laboratory strains of snails and schistosomes. Genetic studies of crosses between snail lines displaying compatible and incompatible phenotypes have revealed some candidate loci, including a gene cluster containing a super oxide dismutase (SOD)-encoding gene [8–10] and a genomic region containing genes putatively involved in parasite recognition [11]. Various transcriptomic comparisons have also been performed on other compatible and incompatible strains of snails and schistosomes [12–16]. These studies uncovered a series of candidate genes involved in recognition, effector, and signaling pathways that could contribute to the compatibility process (see [17] for a recent review). Taken together, the previous reports clearly show that the success or failure of S. mansoni in infecting B. glabrata reflects a complex interplay between the host’s defense mechanisms and the parasite’s infective strategies. Little is known about the molecular variability playing of these molecular determinants underlying the compatibility; only one work has studied and shown the differential allelic expression of a SOD gene in different individuals of the predominantly resistant 13-16-R1 strain of B. glabrata [10]. The objective of the present work is to fill this gap by studying the molecular determinants of compatibility in different populations with varied compatibility phenotypes, in order to evaluate potential between-population differences in the compatibility mechanisms. To achieve this aim, we focused on molecular determinants known to be involved in snail/schistosome compatibility, and studied their expressions and polymorphisms in host and parasite isolates that differ in their compatibilities. We first studied the SmPoMucs (polymorphic mucins from S. mansoni), which were initially identified by a comparative proteomic analysis of two strains of S. mansoni that differed in their compatibility towards the same mollusk strain [18]. SmPoMucs share the general features of mucins, including a N-terminal domain containing a variable number of tandem repeats and a conserved C-terminal domain [19]. These proteins are expressed only by larval-stage parasites during interactions with the snail intermediate host; they are produced and located in the apical gland of miracidia and sporocysts, and are characterized by high levels of glycosylation and polymorphism [19,20]. A detailed analysis of intra- and inter-strain SmPoMuc polymorphisms revealed that the diversification of these proteins has been driven by a complex cascade of mechanisms involving recombination between genes of the multigene SmPoMuc family (10 genes), epigenetic control of transcription, post-transcriptional regulation events, and post-translational modifications [20–22]. This yields a remarkably high degree of diversification from a limited set of genes, enabling each individual parasite to express a specific and unique pattern of SmPoMucs [20]. Functionally, these proteins are thought to play roles in the very early steps of infection [23]. Based on the above findings, it has been proposed that SmPoMucs could be crucial antigens in the snail-schistosome compatibility process. Then, we developed co-immunoprecipitation (CoIP) experiments that enabled us to identify putative SmPoMuc-interacting immune receptors of the snail [24]. We found that SmPoMucs form molecular complexes with the fibrinogen-related proteins (FREPs) of B. glabrata [25]. FREPs are highly polymorphic, with somatic diversification generating unique repertoires in individual B. glabrata [26]. Thus, we considered these proteins to be good candidates as molecular determinants on the snail side of the compatibility between B. glabrata and S. mansoni. This importance of FREPs in the compatibility process was confirmed by specific knockdown of FREP 3 in B. glabrata BS-90 snails, which are totally resistant to a specific laboratory strain of S. mansoni [27]. The knockdown snails lost 21.4% of their resistance to S. mansoni infection, suggesting that FREP 3 participates in recognition but is not the sole determinant.
As FREP immune receptors and their SmPoMuc antigens are clearly involved in the compatibility process, we herein focused on these molecular determinants of the recognition process between the host and the parasite.
We first characterized the compatibilities among all sympatric and allopatric combinations of four strains of S. mansoni (two from Brazil, one from Venezuela, and one from Guadeloupe Island) and four strains of B. glabrata (from the same locations) from South America and the Caribbean area. We then used targeted approach to analyze the expressions of SmPoMucs in Schistosomes and global transcriptomic approach on FREPs between the four strains of B. glabrata. The global transcriptomic analysis of snail strains also revealed large transcriptional differences, especially for the B. glabrata strain that showed the least compatibility when confronted with the studied schistosome strains. Global transcriptomic differences were observed among numerous genes involved in the different phases of the immune response. Based on our findings, we propose that the compatibility between B. glabrata and S. mansoni depends on a multistep process that involves both recognition and effector/anti-effectors systems.
Results
A multistrain approach for assessing compatibility phenotypes
As the objective of the present work was to evaluate the putative link between the expression patterns of SmPoMucs and FREPs and the compatibility between snails and schistosomes, we first established the compatibility levels of four strains of B. glabrata (BgBAR, BgVEN, BgBRE, and BgGUA) when confronted with four strains of S. mansoni (SmLE, SmVEN, SmBRE, and SmGH2). Compatibility was tested for all sympatric and allopatric combinations.
All strain combinations displayed different compatibility levels (Fig 1). SmLE displayed the highest compatibility, showing a 96–100% prevalence of infection when confronted with the four B. glabrata strains. SmGH2 showed the least compatibility, exhibiting prevalences of 0–44% for allopatric combinations and only 60% when confronted with its sympatric mollusk. SmVEN was highly compatible (100%) with its sympatric mollusk strain and with BgBRE and BgGUA, but it was less efficient when infecting the BgBAR snail strain (55%). SmBRE displayed an intermediate compatibility phenotype; it showed 100% prevalence for its sympatric mollusk BgBRE, and its compatibility ranged from 12% to 83% when confronted by the other mollusk strains. Our results for the intensity of infection followed similar trends, ranging from 1 to 8.4 parasites per infected snails (Fig 1). The infective capacities of the four parasite strains exhibited a gradient of compatibility in the following descending order: SmLE, SmVEN, SmBRE, and SmGH2.
Considering the mollusk strains, BgBAR was the least compatible; it exhibited prevalences of 0–55% when confronted with allopatric parasite strains and reached 96% when infected with its sympatric SmLE, but the intensity of infection never exceed 3.9 (even for SmLE). BgVEN, BgBRE, and BgGUA showed very similar compatibility patterns, exhibiting complete compatibility (prevalence, 100%) when exposed to SmLE and SmVEN, but less compatibility with SmGH2. BgGUA and BgVEN displayed very similar compatibility patterns, showing slightly more infectivity when confronted with SmBRE than SmGH2. BgBRE was totally compatible with its sympatric schistosome, but displayed a very low compatibility with SmGH2 (4%). The intensities were generally high, largely between 4.7 and 8.4. Our results indicate that BgBAR is the least compatible host strain, whereas BgVEN, BgBRE, and BgGUA are much more compatible and display quite similar compatibility phenotypes.
SmPoMuc polymorphism analysis
We previously showed that the SmPoMucs are encoded by a multi-gene family of 10 members that can be divided into four paralogous sequence groups (groups 1–4) [20]. Fig 2A shows the SmPoMuc cDNA structure shared by the different groups. Their 5’ regions comprise a variable number of tandem repeats corresponding to repetitions of exon 2, whereas the 3’ regions (exons 3 to 15) differ in their sequences, enabling the SmPoMucs to be divided into groups 1 through 4. At the transcript level, only groups 1, 2 and 3.1 have been detected to date [20]. SmPoMucs of groups 1 and 2 contain the same type of exon 2 (r2, 27 nucleotides) that is repeated in the transcript structure, while those of group 3 contain a different type of repeated exon 2. Most group 3 SmPoMucs have r1 as their repeated sequence, except for the subgroup denoted group 3.1 (r1-r2), which displays both types of exon 2 (r1 and r2) in the gene structure. These recombined genes are present in the genomes of different schistosome strains, but appear to be expressed only in SmGH2 (see also [19,20]).
To analyze SmPoMuc transcript polymorphism, RNA was extracted from 11 individual sporocysts of each strain (SmBRE, SmVEN, SmLE, and SmGH2) and subjected to nested RT-PCR. Consensus primers (see Fig 2A for the positions of the utilized primers) were used to amplify the complete coding sequence of all SmPoMucs in each individual. Fig 2B shows the SmPoMuc banding patterns obtained on agarose gels.
We first examined inter-strain variability. Consistent with the results of previous studies performed using the same method [20], the SmPoMuc banding patterns were highly different across the analyzed strains. To analyze this polymorphism at the protein level, we analyzed SmPoMucs by Western blotting. Proteins from 5000 individuals of each S. mansoni strain were resolved and detected with an anti-SmPoMuc antibody directed against a conserved region of the SmPoMucs [24]. As shown in Fig 2C, the SmPoMuc protein patterns differed across SmLE, SmVEN, SmBRE, and SmGH2, each isolate expressed a specific SmPoMuc profile.
With respect to intra-strain comparisons, the polymorphism was found to be very high at the transcript level. The SmBRE and SmGH2 banding patterns were obtained from a previous work [21] and the banding patterns of SmVEN and SmLE was obtained in the present work. For the 4 S. mansoni isolates, no two individuals display the same amplification profile (Fig 2B). To more precisely characterize these patterns, we sequenced the amplicons obtained from each individual of the four S. mansoni strains. The results are shown in S1 Table. All individuals expressed multiple variants; some expressed only variants belonging to a single group of SmPoMucs, while others expressed variants from two or three groups. Within each group, the SmPoMuc transcript polymorphisms reflected: (i) a variable number of tandem repeats (from 1 to 100) in the 5’ region; (ii) the occurrence of alternative and aberrant splicing in the 3’ region; and (iii) nucleic acid substitutions (synonymous or non-synonymous) in the 5’ and 3’ regions. These different mechanisms were previously reported [19,20]. We did not observe any clear link between the presence of a given variant and the compatibility level of the different strains, with one exception. A sub-group of variants belonging to SmPoMuc group 3.1, named group 3.1(r1-r2), was more abundant in the less compatible SmGH2 strain than in the other strains. This variant was found in six individuals of SmGH2, but in only one individual each of SmBRE and SmVEN and no individual of SmLE.
Interestingly, SmLE and SmVEN, which were the most infective strains, displayed a larger number of SmPoMuc variants (276 and 247, respectively) than the less infective SmBRE and SmGH2 strains (40 and 84, respectively). It is interesting to note that all of the 647 variants sequenced in the present study were different. These results are shown in Fig 3.
SmPoMucs are differentially expressed between S. mansoni strains
The expression levels of SmPoMuc transcripts were assessed for each S. mansoni strain by RT-Q-PCR. Primers E11allgrFw and E14allgrRv were universal to all SmPoMuc genes, whereas the other utilized primers (see Fig 4) allowed us to quantify the transcripts corresponding to the group 1, group 2, group 3.1, and group 3.1 (r1-r2) SmPoMuc genes. The positions of the utilized primers are indicated in Fig 4A. Relative expression ratios were calculated using α-tubulin as a reference gene (Fig 4B).
Our results revealed that the levels of SmPoMuc transcripts of all groups differed across the four schistosome strains. SmLE and SmBRE displayed the lowest levels of SmPoMuc transcripts, and SmVEN and SmGH2 expressed around 2 and 2.5 fold more SmPoMuc transcripts, respectively (Mann-Whitney test: LE vs VEN P = 0.0033; LE vs GH2 P = 0.0079; BRE vs VEN P = 0.0021; BRE vs GH2 P = 0.0025). With respect to the different SmPoMuc groups, the transcription patterns were quite similar between the strains: group 1 was weakly expressed in all cases, whereas group 2 and 3.1 transcripts were expressed at higher levels (2- to 15 fold more, depending on the group and strain). The group 3.1 (r1-r2) SmPoMuc transcripts were highly expressed only in strain SmGH2 (Mann-Whitney test: GH2 vs LE P = 0.0079; GH2 vs BRE P = 0.0025; GH2 vs VEN P = 0.0009).
Interestingly, the sum of the group-level expression data did not correspond to the SmPoMuc expression revealed by the SmPoMuc universal primers. This may reflect that some of the spliced variants of SmPoMucs revealed in a previous study [20] are amplified only with universal primers. As no specific primer could be designed to specifically amplify these spliced variants, we were unable to test this hypothesis.
RNA-seq-based analysis of the four B. glabrata strains
Until now, most of the experiments done on compatibility between Schistosomes and Biomphalaria snails were conducted using targeted Quantitative PCR or micro-array approaches to identified differentially represented transcripts following infection. In the present paper a more global and powerful approach was conducted to identify the differentially regulated transcripts or differential level of constitutive expression between snail strains. This global approach will also ensure a gene discovery effort without foreseeing the molecules involved compared to targeted approaches. To investigate such differences, four B. glabrata strains were used. The global transcript representation was analyzed by RNAseq and correlated with their compatibility phenotypes. BgBAR was the less compatible strain, while BgBRE, BgVEN and BgGUA present higher compatible phenotypes that were mostly similar (Fig 1). To compare the native immune potentials of the four Bg strains, we compared the biological replicates, BgBRE1 and BgBRE2, to the other Bg strains. BgBRE strain was selected for duplicate sequencing because it is the strain for which we have the largest number of individuals in the laboratory. To identify the differentially represented transcripts in the transcriptomes of the different strains, we used the DEseq2 software comparing the duplicate of BgBRE strain to the others transcriptomes. Of the 117,269 transcripts of the BgBRE transcriptome, 6555 (5.6%) were found to be differentially expressed between BgBRE and the three other B. glabrata strains. Fig 5A and 5B present the numbers of BgBAR, BgVEN, and BgGUA transcripts that were significantly over- and under-represented, respectively. BgBAR showed the highest number of differentially expressed transcripts (1257 over-represented and 3462 under-represented). In contrast, BgVEN and BgGUA showed differential expression (both over- and under-representation) of 2983 and 1613 transcripts, respectively. Of the 6555 modulated transcripts identified in the present study, 72%, 45%, and 25% were from BgBAR, BgVEN, and BgGUA, respectively.
Based on our observations that BgBAR differed the most from the other strains in both its molecular phenotype and its compatibility phenotype, we decided to analyze the putative functions that were enriched among its differentially expressed genes. We carried out a Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis on the differentially expressed transcripts that were uniquely over-represented (865 transcripts, Fig 5C) and under-represented (2059 transcripts, Fig 5D) in BgBAR relative to BgBRE. The over-represented transcripts of BgBAR corresponded to 85 biological processes representing 44 categories. Interestingly, eight categories (red arrows in Fig 5C) that contained 15% of the transcripts were grouped together by the REVIGO software into the biological process of “response to biotic and abiotic stress.” One additional category (3% of the transcripts) corresponded to the biological process of “reactive oxygen species metabolism.” These two biological processes are clearly of interest in our study context. Indeed reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been widely shown to be involved in snail/parasite compatibility [8,28,29]. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by the hemocytes of B. glabrata are known to play a crucial role in killing S. mansoni [30,31]. This process could be related to the level of H2O2 expressed by resistant snails associated with a higher expression of SOD genes (copper/zinc superoxide dismutase) [8,32].
The under-represented transcripts of BgBAR fell into 18 categories. Among them, only the “defense response” (3% of the transcripts) seems likely to be related to immune function.
Considering the previous results presented above, we decided to deepen our investigation of immune functions in the different Bg strains. We first identified genes bearing immune-relevant domains and examined their proportions in the studied strains. We referred to a previous study in which the whole transcriptome of BgBRE was screened for the presence of immune-relevant domains using Interproscan [33]. Using these data, we determined the proportion of the relevant transcripts that were differentially expressed in the strains studied herein. The results are shown in Fig 6A. Given the focus of the present paper and our interest in FREPs, we found it interesting that 3% and 10% of all transcripts bearing an “Ig-fold” domain were over and under-represented, respectively, in BgBAR. This particular domain is shared by a family of variable immunoglobulin and lectin domain-containing proteins [33]; notably, this family includes numerous FREPs. A large proportion of the transcripts corresponding to proteins containing other recognition domains, as well as immune signaling molecules and effectors, were also differentially represented between BgBRE and the other three strains. As expected, BgBAR had higher proportions of differentially expressed genes for most of the categories of putative immune-relevant genes.
To study the immune function of the different snail strains more deeply, we constituted a B. glabrata immunome comprising 122 transcripts identified after immune challenge of B. glabrata or by comparative "omic" analyses of snail strains displaying different compatibility phenotypes towards trematodes (S2 Table) [11,17,34]. When we examined these immune-relevant molecules in BgBAR, BgGUA, and BgVEN versus BgBRE (Fig 6B), we identified 37 differentially expressed transcripts. Nine of them were over-represented and 28 were under-represented: of the latter group, 14 were specifically under-represented in BgBAR. Again, BgBAR is the most different among the strains; the nine over-represented transcripts displayed their highest representation in BgBAR, while 20 of the 28 under-represented genes showed their lowest expression levels in this strain. The nine over-represented immune-relevant transcripts included the following: two FREP-encoding transcripts; a transcript containing a Aerolysin domain belonging to the epsilon toxin ETX/Bacillus mosquitocidal toxin MTX2 superfamily previously characterized as a biomphalysin-like protein shown to kill S. mansoni sporocysts [35]; and a transcript encoding an achacin-like, which suggests that BgBAR may have an enhanced ability to respond to antimicrobial stress [34,36]. The under-represented transcripts included the following: several transcripts corresponding to FREP family members; transcripts encoding different molecules of the CREP family, whose members are composed of immunoglobulin domain(s) followed by a C-type lectin domain [33]; and transcripts encoding several factors involved in extracellular matrix remodeling and cell migration (e.g., sco-spondin, ADAMTS, and VEGF receptor).
Characterization and expression analysis of FREPs in the four B. glabrata strains
As several FREPs (available in GenBank databases) were revealed in the above described transcriptomic analysis, we decided to exhaustively study all transcripts in the transcriptomes of BgBAR, BgVEN, BgBRE, and BgGUA that could belong to FREP family members. We selected transcripts corresponding to proteins that contain immunoglobulin (IPR013783) and fibrinogen (IPR002181) domains using the Blast2Go and/or Interproscan software packages. This selection process yielded 258 transcripts. Most of them were not full-length, which meant they could potentially represent molecules that contain fibrinogen or immunoglobulin domains but do not follow the classical organization of FREPs [1 or 2 IgSF domain(s) associate with a fibrinogen domain]. As our objective was to study FREPs-encoding transcripts, we retained all transcripts that contained contiguous immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) and fibrinogen (FBG) domains (full-length or partial). In total, we retained 69 FREP transcripts.
The 69 retained transcripts were translated, and the corresponding amino acid sequences were aligned with the Bg FREP protein sequences contained within GenBank. None was an exact match, but 30 of the 69 transcripts displayed only a few differences, and could thus be clearly assigned according to the GenBank FREP nomenclature [37]. The 38 remaining sequences could not be assigned to the established nomenclature. Next, we aligned the 69 sequences with the B. glabrata genome draft (www.vectorbase.org/organisms/biomphalaria-glabrata; genome assembly version BglaB1) and assigned them to precise positions in the genome (see supplementary S3 Table). The 69 transcripts corresponded to 24 different genomic loci. Several de novo assembled transcripts were validated by traditional Sanger sequencing of PCR products to confirm that this FREPs were not the result of wrong assemblies (S1 Fig). For this study, we classified FREPs by their identity and assigned genomic locus. Any two FREPs that shared more than 85% identity were considered as homologous and were given the same letter (designating FREP class); however if they occupied different genomic loci, the letter is followed by a different number (e.g., C1 and C2). We identified seven loci that encode FREPs with one IgSF domain (grouped into classes A to F), and 16 loci corresponding to FREPs with two IgSF domains (grouped into classes H to M). Finally B. glabrata genome assembly did not allow us to establish the number of IgSF domains for a last FREP class named “O”.
After we characterized these 24 loci of FREPs, we used RNA-seq to analyze the representation of the corresponding transcripts in the four B. glabrata strains. We built a FREP transcriptome containing the 69 selected sequences, mapped the reads obtained from each snail strain to these sequences using the Bowtie2 software, and normalized the hit count values for each transcript using the upper quartile method. The normalized hit count values were then summed for transcripts belonging to the same class. The results (Fig 7A) showed that there was a high degree of heterogeneity in the representation of FREPs between classes and snail strains. For example, FREP A was 2000 fold more highly expressed than FREP E regardless of the snail strain. Between strains, the majority of the transcripts corresponding to FREPs containing one IgSF domain (e.g., FREPs A, D, C1, and C2) were more highly represented in the less-compatible BgBAR strain. Fig 7B shows the summed transcript levels of FREPs containing one or two IgSFs for the four snail strains. The one-IgSF FREPs comprised 80% of the FREP transcripts expressed by BgBAR, but only 55% to 70% of those expressed in the three other snail strains. Moreover, BgBAR was found to globally express more FREPs than the other snail strains (13%, 48% and 52% more than BgGUA, BgVEN, and BgBRE, respectively) (Fig 7B).
FREP polymorphism analysis
As most of the recovered FREP transcripts were only partial sequences, we could not align and compare the sequences of the FREP variants. Thus, to estimate their degree of polymorphism, we selected the longest transcript sequence for each of the 24 FREP loci and performed Blastn alignments with each of the B. glabrata transcriptomes (before CD-Hit EST treatment; Blastn cutoff, 95%). The number of hits was further normalized by the total number of transcripts of each transcriptome. The results (Fig 8A) showed that the variant numbers differed between FREP loci at the intra-strain level. For example, FREPs B and I3 had 50 times more variants than FREP A in BgBRE, while FREP I2 had 30 times fewer variants than FREPs C1 and L in BgBAR. There were also many differences at the inter-strain level; BgBRE (Fig 8B) displayed the highest number of normalized variants (480) followed by BgGUA (409), BgVEN (313), and BgBAR (302). FREP A, E, and M always presented a low number of variants, while FREP F, H, and I3 all had many variants, regardless of the strain (Fig 8A). For the other FREP classes, the numbers of variants differed among the strains, with more variants seen for: FREPs C1 and L in BgBAR; FREPs B, F, I2, I3, and J2 in BgBRE; and FREPs K2 and K4 in BgGUA. For BgVEN, the FREP variants were distributed more or less homogeneously. Notably, although BgBAR had the fewest normalized FREP variants, it displayed the highest numbers of variants for the one-IgSF FREP A, C1 (corresponding to FREP 2 in GenBank), and D (corresponding to FREP 14 in GenBank).
Thus, our results show that BgBAR, which is the least susceptible to S. mansoni presents the highest level of FREP expression and the lowest number of total FREP variants among the studied strains. Moreover, it expresses a higher proportion of FREPs containing one IgSF domain, and has the highest ratio of one-IgSF variants/all FREP variants.
Discussion
FREPs and SmPoMucs are key molecular determinants of the compatibility process between B. glabrata and S. mansoni. Here, we examined the expression patterns and polymorphisms of these important factors in four host isolates and four parasite isolates that displayed different levels of compatibility with one another. Among the schistosomes, strain SmLE was clearly the most infective against the different snail strains, SmGH2 was the least infective, and the other two strains displayed intermediate compatibility patterns (Fig 1). Among the snails, strain BgBAR was clearly the least permissive, whereas the compatibility phenotypes of the other three strains were much higher and quite similar.
In an effort to explain the compatibility differences among the different schistosome strains, we first analyzed the diversity and expression levels of SmPoMucs in the different strains. The most compatible strains, SmLE and SmVEN, expressed similarly high numbers of SmPoMuc variants (around 270 and 250, respectively; Fig 3), while the two less compatible strains expressed fewer variants (45 and 75 for SmBRE and SmGH2, respectively; Fig 3). These results are clearly in agreement with the hypothesis of a matching phenotype [38]. Indeed, if a population of schistosomes is more diverse in their SmPoMuc patterns, they would be less prone to being recognized by a population of hosts that display a fixed number of FREP immune receptors. These results of SmPoMuc polymorphism analysis clearly agree with the theoretical results obtained from co-evolutionary models applied to plant and animal innate immunity [39]. In the multistep infectious interactions of parasites and hosts, a genetically explicit model revealed that polymorphism will be greater at recognition loci than at effector loci, and that host-genotype by parasite-genotype interactions are greater for the recognition phase than for the effector phase. Our results confirm these predictions, as we herein establish a link between SmPoMuc polymorphism and the compatibility phenotype. Additional results obtained by Nuismer and Dybdahl [39] also showed that, compared to the effector phase, the recognition phase contributes more to local adaptation. This also makes sense in the context of our observation that the compatibility level is generally higher for sympatric combinations. The expression level of SmPoMucs also appears to be relevant to the compatibility pattern. In terms of expression, SmVEN and SmGH2 expressed around two fold more SmPoMuc genes than the other two strains. Conceivably, a schistosome expressing more SmPoMucs will generate more SmPoMuc/FREP interactions at the parasite surface (even given a fixed number of possible combinations), which will favor the recognition, the immune response and the killing of the parasite. This could explain why strain SmVEN expressed a similar number of variants compared with strain SmLE, but displayed a lower compatibility phenotype. Similarly, the expression level of SmPoMucs could explain why SmGH2 was less compatible than SmBRE, even though the former expressed more variants than the latter.
Concerning now the comparison of the proportion of variants belonging to the different groups of SmPoMucs in the studied schistosome strains, it revealed that: (i) the expression level and the number of variants of group 1 SmPoMucs is always low; (ii) the expression levels of groups 2 and 3 SmPoMucs are very similar within each strain; (iii) the proportions of group 2 and 3 variants can differ according to the strain (e.g., group 3 was more diversified in strain SmLE); and (iv) the group 3 of SmPoMucs, which containing intermingled repeats [19,20], are only expressed at significant levels in strain SmGH2. These differences in repeat types or numbers could also explain some of the compatibility differences between strains. However, our current understanding of the link between polymorphism, glycosylation status, and recognition by FREP lectins is too fragmentary to allow us to propose a more precise hypothesis. The SmPoMuc repeat number was shown to be related to the glycosylation status within a specific strain of schistosome [20], but the glycosylation of different variants and its influence on FREP recognition remain to be investigated.
Concerning the FREP contents of the studied snail strains, we first performed a global transcriptomic analysis; we then focused on immune genes, and finally on FREPs. As compatibility depends on molecules that are expressed constitutively by the host and the parasite [18], we conducted our transcriptomic analysis on naive snails. Our global comparative analysis revealed that, as expected, the transcriptome of BgBAR (which was much less permissive than the others (Fig 1) showed the greatest differences with respect to the others. Among the differentially expressed transcripts of this strain, we observed enrichment of numerous genes involved in the immune response and responses to biotic and abiotic stimuli. Accordingly, we performed a more targeted analysis of a B. glabrata. immunome composed of 122 transcripts encoding proteins known to be involved in the immune recognition, immune signaling pathways, and effector functions of B. glabrata [17,40]. As expected, BgBAR had a higher proportion of genes that were differentially represented in the majority of these molecular classes and the comparison of the transcription levels of these genes in the different strains showed again that BgBAR is the most important differences. This strain exhibited both over-representation (e.g., FREP1, FREP14, an LBP-BPI 1.1, an achacin, a biomphalysin-like, etc.) and under-representation (e.g., FREP 3.1 M, FREP J1, FREP K2, a biomphalysin-like, a macin, grctm 2, grctm 6, proteases, etc.) of transcripts. As some FREPs were differentially expressed between snail strains, we next analyzed the expression of all FREPs known to be present in the B. glabrata genome. Our results indicated that BgBAR expressed more FREPs than the three other strains, and that most of the FREPs containing one IgSF domain (5 of 7) were more highly expressed in BgBAR compared to the other strains. This suggests that this specific class of FREPs could play a key role in schistosome recognition and anti-schistosome defense. Indeed, this is consistent with a previous report showing that FREP 2 (containing one IgSF domain) interacts with SmPoMuc antigens [24]. Our analysis of FREP polymorphisms between and within strains showed that BgBRE and BgGUA had more variants than BgVEN and BgBAR, suggesting that the diversity of FREPs is not correlated with the compatibility level, as would be expected from an ongoing arms race between FREPs and SmPoMucs. We thus propose (very speculatively) that this absence of correlation could be a consequence of the recent introduction of the schistosome to the South American and Caribbean areas (from which the tested snail strains were sampled) through the Atlantic slave trade of the 16-19th centuries. This would have forced the schistosome to adapt to a new intermediate host of the same genus (B. pfeifferi in Africa versus B. glabrata in the New World). The parasite needed to develop an evolutionary strategy to increase its compatibility with its new host, and thus diversified its SmPoMucs to escape recognition by FREPs. In this context, the diversification of FREPs in some snail strain could be linked to co-evolution with other pathogens living in sympatry with snails of the New World.
Our present results clearly corroborate that FREPs and SmPoMucs seem to be molecular determinants of the compatibility between B. glabrata and S. mansoni. However, it is largely accepted that this compatibility process is a complex one that involves numerous genes engaged in an arms race (see [41] for a recent review). Compatibility can be viewed as a multistep process through which the parasite escapes the recognition and effectors of the host. Although FREPs and SmPoMucs may play a crucial part in this recognition, other pattern recognition receptors (e.g., lectins) and antigens have been suggested to be involved [24]. In terms of the effectors of the host and the anti-effector systems of the parasite, it has been shown that highly reactive chemical compounds derived from molecular oxygen (ROS) are crucial to the snail’s ability to defend itself against S. mansoni [42], and the parasite has developed ROS scavenger systems to counter these molecules [29]. Additional candidate genes have also been recently implicated in the compatibility process between B. glabrata and S. mansoni; for example, the biomphalysin from B. glabrata have been shown to exert high cytotoxicity against S. mansoni sporocysts [35], and a new family of putative immune receptors was identified using a RAD-seq approach [11]. The previous reports and present results therefore collectively suggest that the compatibility process is likely to be much more complex than previously thought. Indeed, our transcriptomic analysis of B. glabrata strains showed that the less permissive snail strain varied from the others in terms of immune-relevant transcripts that are involved not only in immune recognition, but also in signaling pathways and effector functions (Fig 6).
In conclusion, the arms race between B. glabrata and S. mansoni has selected for diversified molecular repertoires that allow the parasite to counter the immune recognition system of the host. The extraordinary diversification that enables SmPoMucs to avoid recognition by FREPs illustrates the outcome of these evolutionary dynamics. The present findings together with other results obtained in recent decades show that the compatibility between B. glabrata and S. mansoni depends on multiple factors, including: (i) the genetics of the snail and the schistosome; (ii) the age of the snail; (iii) the previous interactions of the snail with schistosomes; and (iv) the ability of the environment to influence (through epigenetic mechanisms) the compatible/incompatible phenotypes of both partners (see [41] for a recent review). To solve this complicated puzzle, we need to develop novel integrative approaches that combine comparative genomic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic approaches performed under different environmental conditions. This should enable us to identify relevant candidate genes whose functions could then be validated using CRISPR/Cas or RNAi methodologies. Given the variability of the mechanisms involved in compatibility, such studies must be undertaken on different snail and schistosome populations and strains. These ambitious approaches are absolutely necessary if we hope to identify the molecular pathways that are most likely to be good targets for strategies aimed at blocking transmission through the snail intermediate host.
Materials and methods
Ethic statements
Our laboratory holds permit # A66040 for experiments on animals from both the French Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, and the French Ministry of National Education, Research, and Technology. The housing, breeding and animal care of the utilized animals followed the ethical requirements of our country. The experimenter also possesses an official certificate for animal experimentation from both French ministries (Decree # 87–848, October 19, 1987). Animal experimentation follows the guidelines of the French CNRS. The different protocols used in this study have been approved by the French veterinary agency from the DRAAF Languedoc-Roussillon (Direction Régionale de l'Alimentation, de l'Agriculture et de la Forêt), Montpellier, France (authorization # 007083).
Parasites, snails, and compatibility
The four studied strains of S. mansoni parasites and the four corresponding sympatric snail strains of B. glabrata originated from South America and had been maintained in the laboratory using Swiss OF1 mice (Charles River Laboratories, France) as the definitive host. The four sympatric host/parasite combinations were designated BgVEN/SmVEN (from Guaraca, Venezuela), BgGUA/SmGH2 (le Lamentin, Guadeloupe), BgBRE/SmBRE (Recife, Brazil), and BgBAR/SmLE (Belo Horizonte, Brazil). Miracidia from the parasite strains (SmBRE, SmLE, SmGH2 and SmVEN) were recovered from infected mouse livers and intestines and transformed into sporocysts in vitro as previously described [19]. Compatibility trials between the strains of parasites and snails were conducted as previously described [43]. For all sympatric and allopatric combinations, we experimentally infected snails with 20 miracidia per snail, which was previously shown to yield a maximum infection rate regardless of the utilized strain [43]. Two weeks later, we assessed the prevalence (percentage of infected snails) and intensity (number of developed parasites per infected snail) of infection. Three independent experiments were performed. The data presented in the present manuscript correspond to the mean values obtained in a previous published work [43] and the data obtained from two other experiments performed in 2010 and 2012.
Western blot analysis of SmPoMucs in S. mansoni sporocysts
Five thousand sporocysts were collected and counted for each S. mansoni strain (SmBRE, SmLE, SmGH2, and SmVEN). The samples were ground with a pestle and vortexed, and proteins were extracted using UTC buffer (7 M urea, 2 M thiourea, 30 mM Tris, pH 8.5, and 4% CHAPS) for 2 h at room temperature. The samples were centrifuged at 10,000 g for 5 min, the supernatants were recovered, and the protein concentrations were estimated using a 2D Quant kit (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). For each sample, proteins (8 μg) were incubated with Laemmli buffer for 5 min at 99°C, resolved by 12% SDS-PAGE, and blotted on a nitrocellulose membrane (Trans-blot Turbo; Bio-Rad). The membrane was blocked with 5% skimmed dry milk in TBST (TBS containing 0.05% Tween 20) for 3 h at room temperature and incubated with the previously described anti-SmPoMuc [24] diluted 1/1000 in TBST overnight at 4°C. The membrane was washed three times in TBST (10 min each, room temperature), and then incubated with peroxidase-conjugated purified anti-rabbit IgG (Sigma Aldrich) diluted 1/5000 in TBST with 5% skimmed dry milk for 90 min at room temperature. The membrane was washed three times in TBST and once in TBS, and proteins were detected with a ChemiDoc MP Imaging system (Bio-Rad) using ECL reagents. As a loading control, we performed a parallel Western blot using anti-actin (Thermo Scientific) diluted 1/1000 and HRP-conjugated anti-mouse IgG (Sigma Aldrich) diluted 1/10,000.
SmPoMuc polymorphism analysis using individual sporocysts of S. mansoni
Eleven sporocyts were recovered individually from each S. mansoni strain. RNA was isolated from each individual using a Dynabeads mRNA Direct Micro kit (Ambion Life Technologies) as previously described [20]. The RNA was reverse transcribed by adding the enzyme mix (Superscript II, Invitrogen) directly to the paramagnetic Dynabeads. The generated cDNA was recovered using the magnetic system, washed twice in 10 mM Tris (pH 7.5) and SmPoMuc sequences were directly amplified using PCR and nested PCR, as previously described [20]. The obtained products were separated by 1% agarose gel electrophoresis. Each band was excised, purified, and cloned into pCR4-TOPO, and 100 clones were sequenced.
Quantitative PCR analysis of SmPoMuc expression on S. mansoni sporocysts
Five thousand sporocysts from each S. mansoni strain were recovered and stored at -80°C. RNA was extracted using a Dynabeads mRNA Direct Micro kit (Ambion Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Between the washing and elution steps of the RNA purification, an additional on-bead DNase treatment was performed using the TURBO DNA-free kit (Ambion Life Technologies). Reverse transcription was performed using the Maxima H Minus First Strand cDNA Synthesis kit (Thermo Scientific) with a 1:1 mixture of oligo dT and random primers. Quantitative PCR amplifications were performed with 2 μl of 20-fold diluted cDNA and 0.5 μM of each primer in a final volume of 10 μl, using a LightCycler 480 SYBR Green I Master kit and a Light Cycler 480 II Real Time instrument (both from Roche). An initial denaturation at 95°C for 12 min was followed by: 45 cycles of 11 sec denaturation at 95°C, 11 sec annealing at 60°C, and 19 sec elongation at 72°C; a melting curve step from 65 to 97°C with a heating rate of 0.11°C/sec and continuous fluorescence measurement; and a cooling step to 40°C. For each reaction, the cycle threshold (Ct) was determined using the 2nd derivative method of the LightCycler 480 Software release 1.5 (Roche). PCR experiments were performed in triplicate (technical replicates) from three biological replicates. The mean value of Ct was calculated. Corrected melting curves were checked using the Tm-calling method of the LightCycler 480 Software release 1.5. Results were normalized with respect to the α-tubulin gene, as previously described [22], and ΔCt values were calculated. The primers used to analyze the different SmPoMuc groups are indicated in Fig 1A.
B. glabrata cDNA library construction and sequencing
RNA extraction, cDNA library construction, and Illumina SOLEXA sequencing were performed as previously described [33,44]. Briefly, total RNA was extracted from whole snail body tissues from 10 juvenile, 10 adult, and 10 old snails for each B. glabrata strain (BgVEN, BgGUA, BgBRE, and BgBAR). Tissues were disrupted in liquid nitrogen and total RNA was extracted using the TRIzol reagent (Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Equimolar amounts of RNA from juvenile, adult and old B. glabrata were combined to yield two pools of 30 individuals for BgBRE (BRE1 and BRE2) and one pool of 30 individuals for each of the other strains (BgBAR, BgVEN and BgGUA).
Paired-end 72-bp cDNA libraries were generated using an mRNA-seq kit for transcriptome sequencing (Solexa, Illumina) on a Genome analyzer II platform (Illumina). Three samples were multiplexed per lane. Library construction and sequencing were performed by MGX (Montpellier Genomix, c/o Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle, Montpellier, France). For library constructions cDNA fragments following RT-PCR amplification ranged from 220 to 500 bp (average, 300 bp). The numbers of 72-bp reads obtained from BgBRE1, BgBRE2, BgBAR, BgGUA, and BgVEN were 99,316,948, 73,000,210, 116,679,444, 100,640,190 and 111,178,786, respectively. The reads that passed the Illumina quality filter were further cleaned via a previously described workflow, using the Galaxy server [33,44]. The 13 first and three last low-quality bases were then trimmed; yielding paired-end reads of 56 nucleotides each. Reads without a pair (orphan reads) were removed. The final high-quality libraries used for transcriptome assemblies contained 90,331,578, 66,558 544, 105,718,404, 88,800,366, and 85,918,982 reads for BgBRE1, BgBRE2, BgBAR, BgGUA, and BgVEN, respectively.
Processing of read sequences obtained from RNA-seq of B. glabrata
De novo transcriptomic assemblies were performed using the Velvet version 1.2.02 software implemented by the python script provided by Oases version 0.2.06, as previously described [33,44]. The resulting contigs were merged into unigene clusters using CD-HIT-EST version 4.5.4 A multiple k-mer assembly approach was applied to optimize the assembly. Four high-quality reference transcriptomes were produced, comprising 117,269, 70,533, 82,500, and 79,664 transcripts for strains BgBRE, BgBAR, BgGUA, and BgVEN, respectively (for transcriptome details see S4 Table). The transcripts were automatically annotated using Blast2GO version 2.4.2.
Differential expression of transcripts in B. glabrata
Quality reads (Phred score >26) were aligned on the BgBRE transcriptome assembly using Bowtie2 (v2.0.2; mapping quality score 255) on the Galaxy server (http://bioinfo.univ-perp.fr) [45]. The count of the reads mapped to each transcript was assessed using Hitcount to BAM (SAM tools v0.1.18.0). The obtained values were normalized by the upper quartile method [46], which has been proposed to be more accurate than the RPKM method of normalization [47]. The DESeq2 software (v2.12; http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/DESeq2.html) [48] was used under default settings to identify genes that were differentially expressed in the two biological snail sample duplicates (BRE1 and BRE2) versus the other snail strain samples (P<0.05). Hierarchical ascending clustering (HAC) with Pearson correlation, which was performed using the Cluster 3.0 [49] and JavaTreeView software packages, was used to generate a heatmap for analysis of the transcript expression patterns (log2 fold change).
Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis
To detect biological processes that were significantly over- or under-represented in the BgBAR strain, we examined the transcripts found to be differentially expressed between BgBAR and BgBRE. Functional enrichment was assessed using the GoStatsPlus package in R (https://github.com/davfre/GOstatsPlus). The enrichment was calculated for the 3 categories including of biological process (BP), molecular function (MF), and cellular component (CC), and. The results were imported into REVIGO [50] for further analysis and visualization.
Sequence analysis of B. glabrata FREPs
Transcripts corresponding to potential FREP sequences were selected from transcriptomes on the basis of Blast2Go annotations or the presence of immunoglobulin and/or fibrinogen domains (IPR013783 and IPR002181, respectively), as detected by Interproscan. As most of the obtained sequences were not full length, transcripts encoding complete sequences or partial sequences with contiguous Immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) and fibrinogen (FBG) domains were selected to be sure to have a transcript belonging to a real FREP family member and not to GREP, CREP, FREM or IgSF or FBG containing molecules. The retained transcripts were translated to predicted amino acid sequences and aligned with those of reference FREP proteins obtained from GenBank using BioEdit version 7.1.3.0. and were also aligned on the B. glabrata genome draft using the Blast tool available on the Vector Base website (https://www.vectorbase.org/). For quantitative analysis of FREPs, the reads from each B. glabrata strain were mapped to a reference FREP transcriptome (FREP transcripts assembled from the transcriptomes of the four snail strains) using Bowtie2 (v2.0.2). The mapped reads were counted per transcript and the values were normalized by the upper quartile method, as described above. To estimate the FREP polymorphism in each strain, the longest transcript from each FREP class was aligned against the B. glabrata transcriptomes obtained before CD-Hit EST treatment, using Blastn (cutoff, 95% identity) on the Galaxy server. The number of mapped hits was further normalized to the total number of transcripts for each B. glabrata transcriptome, and the level of polymorphism was calculated as follows for each FREP class and snail strain: normalized number of FREP variants = (number of blast hits / total number of transcripts) x 105.
Validation of de novo transcript assembly
Several de novo assembled transcripts were validated by traditional Sanger sequencing of PCR products. Briefly, depending of the strain, total RNA was reverse transcribed with random primers and RevertAid premium enzyme (Thermo scientific). Two μl of the RT reaction was then used for PCR (Advantage 2 PCR system, Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) with primers that were designed to specially target and amplify novel predicted transcripts, and amplicons were sequenced (GATC Biotech, Konstanz, Germany). Sequences from Sanger sequencing and from computational assembly of de novo transcripts were aligned (Supplementary S1 Fig).
Accession numbers
The obtained SmPoMuc sequences were deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: KX645102-KX645377 for SmLE, KX645378-KX645624 for SmVEN, EU676447-EU676459/EU676503-EU676530/EU676572-EU676583/EU676595-EU676625 for SmBRE, and EU676460-EU676502/EU676531-EU676571/EU676584-EU676594/EU676556-EU676626 for SmGH2.
The obtained FREP sequences were deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: KY024239 to KY024307.
Supporting information
Acknowledgments
Authors acknowledge the use of the B. glabrata genome draft (genome assembly version BglaB1) in the Vectorbase database.
Data Availability
The obtained SmPoMuc sequences were deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: KX645102-KX645377 for SmLE, KX645378-KX645624 for SmVEN, EU676447-EU676459/EU676503-EU676530/EU676572-EU676583/EU676595-EU676625 for SmBRE, and EU676460-EU676502/EU676531-EU676571/EU676584-EU676594/EU676556-EU676626 for SmGH2. The obtained FREP sequences were deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: KY024239 to KY024307.
Funding Statement
BG acknowledges support from ANR JCJC INVIMORY (ANR-13-JSV7-0009). GM acknowledges support from ANR Schistophepigen (ANR-07-BLAN-0119). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The obtained SmPoMuc sequences were deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: KX645102-KX645377 for SmLE, KX645378-KX645624 for SmVEN, EU676447-EU676459/EU676503-EU676530/EU676572-EU676583/EU676595-EU676625 for SmBRE, and EU676460-EU676502/EU676531-EU676571/EU676584-EU676594/EU676556-EU676626 for SmGH2. The obtained FREP sequences were deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: KY024239 to KY024307.