Back to Search Start Over

Comparative analysis of microRNA profiles between adult Ascaris lumbricoides and Ascaris suum

Authors :
Min-Jun Xu
Xing-Quang Zhu
Hui-Qun Song
Lifei Peng
Samer Alasaad
Jian-Ping Tao
Chang-Chun Shao
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
International Science & Technology Cooperation (China)
Gansu Province
Source :
BMC Veterinary Research, Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

[Background] The parasitic nematodes Ascaris lumbricoides and A. suum are of great public health and economic significance, and the two taxa were proposed to represent a single species. miRNAs are known with functions of gene regulations at post-transcriptional level.<br />[Results] We herein compared the miRNA profiles of A. lumbricoides and A. suum female adults by Solexa deep sequencing combined with bioinformatics analysis and stem-loop real-time PCR. Using the A. suum genome as the reference genome, we obtained 171 and 494 miRNA candidates from A. lumbricoides and A. suum, respectively. Among which, 74 miRNAs were shared between the two taxa, 97 and 420 miRNAs were A. lumbricoides and A. suum specific. Target and function prediction revealed a significant set of targets which are related to ovarian message protein, vitellogenin and chondroitin proteoglycan of the two nematodes. Enrichment analysis revealed that the percentages of most predicted functions of the miRNA targets were similar, with some taxon specific or taxon enhanced functions, such as different target numbers, specific functions (NADH dehydrogenase and electron carrier functions), etc.<br />[Conclusions] This study characterized comparatively the miRNAs of adult A. lumbricoides and A. suum, and the findings provide additional evidence that A. lumbricoides and A. suum represent a single species. Due to the fast evolution nature of miRNAs and the different parasitic living conditions of humans and pigs, the phenomenon above might indicate a fast evolution of miRNAs of Ascaris in humans and pigs.<br />This work was supported in part by the International Science & Technology Cooperation Program of China (Grant No. 2013DFA31840), the Science Fund for Creative Research Groups of Gansu Province (Grant No. 1210RJIA006) to XQZ, and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (Grant No. 201104363) to MJX.

Details

ISSN :
17466148
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC veterinary research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....af093c02dec5e29d9fd67fcc588014a0