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Bile acids in host intestine activate larvae of tapeworms and facilitate its invasion. However, the mechanism underlying this process is poorly understood. In order to better understand responses of tapeworms to host biles, we used RNA-Seq profiling method to study the transcriptomes of Cysticercus Pisiformis (larvae of Taenia Pisiformis) after host bile acid treatment. A total of 338.32 million high-quality clean reads were obtained by Illumina Hiseq platform. Totally, 62,009 unigenes were assembled, 38,382 of which were successfully annotated to known databases. A total of 9324 unigenes were identified as differentially expressed genes (DEGs), of which 5380 and 3944 genes were up- and down-regulated in the group treated with bile acids, respectively. Gene Ontology analysis revealed that biosynthesis and energy metabolism potential were significantly strengthened after host bile treatment in C. pisiformis. Similarly, KEGG pathway analysis revealed an enrichment of pathways related to lipid metabolism and carbohydrate metabolism. Among them, 'AMPK signaling pathway' which is critical in balancing cellular energy, was significantly enriched after bile acids activation. In addition, pathways of 'Fatty acid biosynthesis', 'Fatty acid elongation', 'Starch and sucrose metabolism', and 'glycolysis gluconeogenesis' were also significantly changed after bile acid treatment. qRT-PCR analysis confirmed the differential abundances of some key genes in these pathways. Our data suggest that host bile acids remarkably promote the pathways of energy metabolism of this parasite and regulate the genes involved in balancing lipid metabolism and carbohydrate metabolism. These findings provide new insights on the lifecycle of Taenia parasites. Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Citation

Zhong-Li Liu, Shuai Wang, Xue-Peng Cai, Qiao-Ying Zeng. Transcriptome profiling of Cysticercus Pisiformis provides insight into responses to host bile acids. Parasitology international. 2021 Apr;81:102246

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PMID: 33276143

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