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Evolutionary and biomedical implications of a Schistosoma japonicum complementary DNA resource

Authors :
Shengyue Wang
Gang Fu
Ju-Jun Wang
Zheng Feng
Qing Yan
Zhi-Dong Zhu
Zhao-jun Wang
Ze-Guang Han
Paul J. Brindley
Feng Liu
Yi-Ping Rong
Jian Wu
Chun-Liang Xue
Xin Zhang
Donald P. McManus
Zhi-Qin Wang
Zhu Chen
Xiang-Lin Zhang
Xiangru Xu
Da-kang Shen
Huai-Dong Song
Xue-Nian Xu
Ling-Chun Zeng
Wei Hu
Source :
Nature Genetics. 35:139-147
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2003.

Abstract

Schistosoma japonicum causes schistosomiasis in humans and livestock in the Asia-Pacific region. Knowledge of the genome of this parasite should improve understanding of schistosome-host interactions, biomedical aspects of schistosomiasis and invertebrate evolution. We assigned 43,707 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) derived from adult S. japonicum and their eggs to 13,131 gene clusters. Of these, 35% shared no similarity with known genes and 75% had not been reported previously in schistosomes. Notably, S. japonicum encoded mammalian-like receptors for insulin, progesterone, cytokines and neuropeptides, suggesting that host hormones, or endogenous parasite homologs, could orchestrate schistosome development and maturation and that schistosomes modulate anti-parasite immune responses through inhibitors, molecular mimicry and other evasion strategies.

Details

ISSN :
15461718 and 10614036
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f17fc44ba697ab57ff3c197f264da7aa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng1236