Programmed knockout mutation of liver fluke granulin, Ov-grn-1, impedes malignant transformation during chronic opisthorchiasis

Author:

Chaiyadet Sujittra,Tangkawattana Sirikachorn,Smout Michael JORCID,Ittiprasert WannapornORCID,Mann Victoria H.,Deenonpoe Raksawan,Arunsan Patpicha,Loukas AlexORCID,Brindley Paul JORCID,Laha Thewarach

Abstract

AbstractInfection with the food-borne liver fluke Opisthorchis viverrini is the principal risk factor for cholangiocarcinoma in the Mekong Basin countries of Thailand, Lao PDR, Vietnam, Myanmar and Cambodia. Using a novel model of CCA, involving infection with gene-edited liver flukes in the hamster during concurrent exposure to a nitrosamine, we explored the role of the fluke granulin-like growth factor Ov-GRN-1 in malignancy. We produced programmed gene knockout flukes (ΔOv-grn-1) by delivery of a CRISPR/Cas9/gRNA system by electroporation. Genome sequencing confirmed Cas9-catalyzed mutations in the targeted genes, which was accompanied by rapid depletion of transcripts and the cognate proteins. Whereas Ov-grn-1 gene-edited parasites colonized the biliary tract and developed into adult flukes, less hepatobiliary tract disease manifested during chronic infection with ΔOv-grn-1 worms in comparison to hamsters infected with control parasites. Specifically, immunohistochemical analysis of thin sections of livers revealed markedly less periductal fibrosis surrounding the flukes and less liver fibrosis globally during infection with ΔOv-grn-1 genotype worms, minimal biliary epithelial cell proliferation, and markedly fewer mutations of TP53 in biliary epithelial cells. Moreover, fewer hamsters developed high-grade cholangiocarcinoma when infected with the ΔOv-grn-1 flukes compared to controls. The clinically-relevant, pathophysiological phenotype of the hepatobiliary tract confirmed a role for this secreted growth factor in malignancy and morbidity during opisthorchiasis.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference64 articles.

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