Current Research in Immunology (Jan 2021)

Genetic changes of Plasmodium vivax tempers host tissue-specific responses in Anopheles stephensi

  • Seena Kumari,
  • Charu Chauhan,
  • Sanjay Tevatiya,
  • Deepak Singla,
  • Tanwee Das De,
  • Punita Sharma,
  • Tina Thomas,
  • Jyoti Rani,
  • Deepali Savargaonkar,
  • Kailash C. Pandey,
  • Veena Pande,
  • Rajnikant Dixit

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2
pp. 12 – 22

Abstract

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Recently, we showed how an early restriction of gut flora proliferation by Plasmodium vivax favors immune-suppression and Plasmodium survival in the gut lumen (Sharma et al., 2020). Here, we asked post gut invasion how P. vivax interacts with individual tissues such as the midgut, hemocyte, and salivary glands, and manages its survival in the mosquito host. Our data from tissue-specific comparative RNA-Seq analysis and extensive temporal/spatial expression profiling of selected mosquito transcripts in the uninfected and P. vivax infected mosquito’s tissues indicated that (i) a transient suppression of gut metabolic machinery by early oocysts; (ii) enriched expression of nutritional responsive proteins and immune proteins against late oocysts, together may ensure optimal parasite development and gut homeostasis restoration; (iii) pre-immune activation of hemocyte by early gut-oocysts infection via REL induction (p ​< ​0.003); and altered expression of hemocyte-encoded immune proteins may cause rapid removal of free circulating sporozoites from hemolymph; (iv) while a strong suppression of salivary metabolic activities, and elevated expression of salivary specific secretory, as well as immune proteins together, may favor the long-term storage and survival of invaded sporozoites. Finally, our RNA-Seq-based discovery of 4449 transcripts of Plasmodium vivax origin, and their developmental stage-specific expression modulation in the corresponding infected mosquito tissues, predicts a possible mechanism of mosquito responses evasion by P. vivax. Conclusively, our system-wide RNA-Seq analysis provides the first genetic evidence of direct mosquito-Plasmodium interaction and establishes a functional correlation.