Temperature-induced reorganisation of Schistocephalus solidus (Cestoda) proteome during the transition to the warm-blooded host

Author:

Borvinskaya Ekaterina V.1ORCID,Kochneva Albina A.2ORCID,Drozdova Polina B.1ORCID,Balan Olga V.2ORCID,Zgoda Victor G.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Biology, Irkutsk State University, 3 Lenin St, 664025 Irkutsk, Russia

2. Institute of Biology, Karelian Research Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 11 Pushkinskaya Street, 185910 Petrozavodsk, Karelia, Russia

3. Department of Proteomic Research and Mass Spectrometry, Institute of Biomedical Chemistry (IBMC), 10 Pogodinskaya street, 119121 Moscow, Russia

Abstract

ABSTRACT The protein composition of the cestode Schistocephalus solidus was measured in an experiment simulating the trophic transmission of the parasite from a cold-blooded to a warm-blooded host. The first hour of host colonisation was studied in a model experiment, in which sticklebacks Gasterosteus aculeatus infected with S. solidus were heated at 40°C for 1 h. As a result, a decrease in the content of one tegument protein was detected in the plerocercoids of S. solidus. Sexual maturation of the parasites was initiated in an experiment where S. solidus larvae were taken from fish and cultured in vitro at 40°C for 48 h. Temperature-independent changes in the parasite proteome were investigated by incubating plerocercoids at 22°C for 48 h in culture medium. Analysis of the proteome allowed us to distinguish the temperature-induced genes of S. solidus, as well as to specify the molecular markers of the plerocercoid and adult worms. The main conclusion of the study is that the key enzymes of long-term metabolic changes (glycogen consumption, protein production, etc.) in parasites during colonisation of a warm-blooded host are induced by temperature.

Funder

Saint Petersburg State University

Core

Russian Academy of Sciences

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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