Chromosome-level genome of Schistosoma haematobium underpins genome-wide explorations of molecular variation

Author:

Stroehlein Andreas J.,Korhonen Pasi K.,Lee V. Vern,Ralph Stuart A.,Mentink-Kane Margaret,You Hong,McManus Donald P.,Tchuenté Louis-Albert Tchuem,Stothard J. Russell,Kaur Parwinder,Dudchenko Olga,Aiden Erez Lieberman,Yang Bicheng,Yang Huanming,Emery Aidan M.,Webster Bonnie L.,Brindley Paul J.,Rollinson David,Chang Bill C. H.,Gasser Robin B.,Young Neil D.ORCID

Abstract

Urogenital schistosomiasis is caused by the blood fluke Schistosoma haematobium and is one of the most neglected tropical diseases worldwide, afflicting > 100 million people. It is characterised by granulomata, fibrosis and calcification in urogenital tissues, and can lead to increased susceptibility to HIV/AIDS and squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder. To complement available treatment programs and break the transmission of disease, sound knowledge and understanding of the biology and ecology of S. haematobium is required. Hybridisation/introgression events and molecular variation among members of the S. haematobium-group might effect important biological and/or disease traits as well as the morbidity of disease and the effectiveness of control programs including mass drug administration. Here we report the first chromosome-contiguous genome for a well-defined laboratory line of this blood fluke. An exploration of this genome using transcriptomic data for all key developmental stages allowed us to refine gene models (including non-coding elements) and annotations, discover ‘new’ genes and transcription profiles for these stages, likely linked to development and/or pathogenesis. Molecular variation within S. haematobium among some geographical locations in Africa revealed unique genomic ‘signatures’ that matched species other than S. haematobium, indicating the occurrence of introgression events. The present reference genome (designated Shae.V3) and the findings from this study solidly underpin future functional genomic and molecular investigations of S. haematobium and accelerate systematic, large-scale population genomics investigations, with a focus on improved and sustained control of urogenital schistosomiasis.

Funder

Australian Research Council

University of Western Australia

Welch Foundation

McNair Medical Institute

NIH Encyclopedia of DNA Elements Mapping Center

US-Israel Binational Science Foundation

Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences

NSF Physics Frontiers Center Award

NIH CEGS

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Virology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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