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Chemosensory mechanisms of host seeking and infectivity in skin-penetrating nematodes.


ABSTRACT: Approximately 800 million people worldwide are infected with one or more species of skin-penetrating nematodes. These parasites persist in the environment as developmentally arrested third-stage infective larvae (iL3s) that navigate toward host-emitted cues, contact host skin, and penetrate the skin. iL3s then reinitiate development inside the host in response to sensory cues, a process called activation. Here, we investigate how chemosensation drives host seeking and activation in skin-penetrating nematodes. We show that the olfactory preferences of iL3s are categorically different from those of free-living adults, which may restrict host seeking to iL3s. The human-parasitic threadworm Strongyloides stercoralis and hookworm Ancylostoma ceylanicum have highly dissimilar olfactory preferences, suggesting that these two species may use distinct strategies to target humans. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated mutagenesis of the S. stercoralis tax-4 gene abolishes iL3 attraction to a host-emitted odorant and prevents activation. Our results suggest an important role for chemosensation in iL3 host seeking and infectivity and provide insight into the molecular mechanisms that underlie these processes.

SUBMITTER: Gang SS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7395504 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Chemosensory mechanisms of host seeking and infectivity in skin-penetrating nematodes.

Gang Spencer S SS   Castelletto Michelle L ML   Yang Emily E   Ruiz Felicitas F   Ruiz Felicitas F   Brown Taylor M TM   Bryant Astra S AS   Grant Warwick N WN   Hallem Elissa A EA  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20200710 30


Approximately 800 million people worldwide are infected with one or more species of skin-penetrating nematodes. These parasites persist in the environment as developmentally arrested third-stage infective larvae (iL3s) that navigate toward host-emitted cues, contact host skin, and penetrate the skin. iL3s then reinitiate development inside the host in response to sensory cues, a process called activation. Here, we investigate how chemosensation drives host seeking and activation in skin-penetrat  ...[more]

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