Description of the Transcriptomes of Immune Response-Activated Hemocytes from the Mosquito Vectors Aedes aegypti and Armigeres subalbatus

Author:

Bartholomay Lyric C.1,Cho Wen-Long2,Rocheleau Thomas A.1,Boyle Jon P.1,Beck Eric T.1,Fuchs Jeremy F.1,Liss Paul1,Rusch Michael1,Butler Katherine M.1,Wu Roy Chen-Chih2,Lin Shih-Pei2,Kuo Hang-Yen2,Tsao I-Yu2,Huang Chiung-Yin2,Liu Tze-Tze3,Hsiao Kwang-Jen3,Tsai Shih-Feng4,Yang Ueng-Cheng5,Nappi Anthony J.1,Perna Nicole T.1,Chen Chen-Cheng2,Christensen Bruce M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Health and Biomedical Sciences, University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706

2. Department of Parasitology

3. Genome Research Center and Institute of Genetics

4. National Health Research Institutes, Nankang, Taipei 115, Taiwan

5. Institute of Bioinformatics, National Yang-Ming University, Shih-Pai, Taipei 112

Abstract

ABSTRACT Mosquito-borne diseases, including dengue, malaria, and lymphatic filariasis, exact a devastating toll on global health and economics, killing or debilitating millions every year (54). Mosquito innate immune responses are at the forefront of concerted research efforts aimed at defining potential target genes that could be manipulated to engineer pathogen resistance in vector populations. We aimed to describe the pivotal role that circulating blood cells (called hemocytes) play in immunity by generating a total of 11,952 Aedes aegypti and 12,790 Armigeres subalbatus expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences from immune response-activated hemocyte libraries. These ESTs collapsed into 2,686 and 2,107 EST clusters, respectively. The clusters were used to adapt the web-based interface for annotating bacterial genomes called A Systematic Annotation Package for Community Analysis of Genomes (ASAP) for analysis of ESTs. Each cluster was categorically characterized and annotated in ASAP based on sequence similarity to five sequence databases. The sequence data and annotations can be viewed in ASAP at https://asap.ahabs.wisc.edu/annotation/php/ASAP1.htm . The data presented here represent the results of the first high-throughput in vivo analysis of the transcriptome of immunocytes from an invertebrate. Among the sequences are those for numerous immunity-related genes, many of which parallel those employed in vertebrate innate immunity, that have never been described for these mosquitoes.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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