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Clusters of polymorphic transmembrane genes control resistance to schistosomes in snail vectors.

Authors :
Tennessen JA
Bollmann SR
Peremyslova E
Kronmiller BA
Sergi C
Hamali B
Blouin MS
Source :
ELife [Elife] 2020 Aug 26; Vol. 9. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Aug 26.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Schistosomiasis is a debilitating parasitic disease infecting hundreds of millions of people. Schistosomes use aquatic snails as intermediate hosts. A promising avenue for disease control involves leveraging innate host mechanisms to reduce snail vectorial capacity. In a genome-wide association study of Biomphalaria glabrata snails, we identify genomic region PTC2 which exhibits the largest known correlation with susceptibility to parasite infection (>15 fold effect). Using new genome assemblies with substantially higher contiguity than the Biomphalaria reference genome, we show that PTC2 haplotypes are exceptionally divergent in structure and sequence. This variation includes multi-kilobase indels containing entire genes, and orthologs for which most amino acid residues are polymorphic. RNA-Seq annotation reveals that most of these genes encode single-pass transmembrane proteins, as seen in another resistance region in the same species. Such groups of hyperdiverse snail proteins may mediate host-parasite interaction at the cell surface, offering promising targets for blocking the transmission of schistosomiasis.<br />Competing Interests: JT, SB, EP, BK, CS, BH, MB No competing interests declared<br /> (© 2020, Tennessen et al.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050-084X
Volume :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ELife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32845238
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.59395