Abstract:
Setaria digitata is an ivory colored thread like animal parasitic nematode, which naturally resides
in the peritoneum cavity of ungulates such as cattle and buffaloes. S. digitata share morphological,
histological and drug responses similarities with Wucheraria bancrofti and Brugia malayi. Hence,
it is used as a model organism to study W. bancrofti and B. malayi when specimens were not
available. S. digitata novel protein (SDNP), is a single copy gene. It was found to be ubiquitously
expressed in all the life stages of the nematode. It also shows a significant sequence resemblance
with novel parasite specific genes of W. bancrofti, Loa, Brugia malayi and Onchocerca volvulus.
In this study, the bioinformatics analysis, co-immunoprecipitation, RNA interference in-vitro
(culture medium) with adults and in-vivo (inside the mosquito, Culex quinquefasciatus) with
microfilariae were carried out to investigate the function of the SDNP.
According to the bioinformatics analysis, the SDNP is a positively charged, basic protein with a
better in-vivo half-life and thermostable tertiary structure. Due to the hydrophilic nature of the
protein, it can be predicted that the protein is most likely to be in the cytosol than it to be in the
membrane. The phylogenetic analysis of the protein showed that all of the taxonomic units in its
cluster are animal parasitic nematodes and surprisingly this cluster is phylogentically related to a
cluster having human parasites. To predict the three dimensional structure of the protein, CABS
fold server was selected. The 3D structure obtained from the CABS fold server was refined using
the Mod Refiner server and the model validation was carried out using ProSA and RAMPAGE
tools. The outcomes of these analyses suggested that, a stable 3D structure had been predicted.
The adult female S. digitata worm was subjected to RNAi by microinjecting the in-vivo synthesized
SDNP siRNA and phenotypic and cellular changes associated with the interference were analyzed.
The qPCR analysis of the SDNP transcript levels revealed a significant reduction of SDNP mRNA
following siRNA microinjection into S. digitata adult worms. Similarly, immunohistochemical
staining indicated a reduction of SDNP expression. Furthermore, worms treated with siRNA
showed a significant reduction of microfilariae release together with embryonic lethality by
arresting an early developmental stage compared to non-treated worms. A distinct motility
reduction was also observed in treated worms compared to non-treated counterparts showing the
amenability of S. digitata to the siRNA induced RNAi for the first time. The presence of
interdomain linkers of muscle-specific twitchin kinase and calcium-dependent protein kinase
isoform CDPK1, together with the results of foregoing and previous studies suggested that SDNP
is most likely a protein involved in muscle movement, growth, and development of the nematode.