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Fasciola hepatica hijacks host macrophage miRNA machinery to modulate early innate immune responses

Nham Tran, Alison Ricafrente, Joyce To, Maria E. Lund, Tânia M. Marques, Margarida Gama‐Carvalho, Krystyna Cwiklinski, John P. Dalton, Sheila Donnelly

2021Scientific Reports40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fasciola hepatica, a global worm parasite of humans and their livestock, regulates host innate immune responses within hours of infection. Host macrophages, essential to the first-line defence mechanisms, are quickly restricted in their ability to initiate a classic protective pro-inflammatory immune response. We found that macrophages from infected animals are enriched with parasite-derived micro(mi)RNAs. The most abundant of these miRNAs, fhe-miR-125b, is released by the parasite via exosomes and is homologous to a mammalian miRNA, hsa-miR-125b, that is known to regulate the activation of pro-inflammatory M1 macrophages. We show that the parasite fhe-miR-125b loads onto the mammalian Argonaut protein (Ago-2) within macrophages during infection and, therefore, propose that it mimics host miR-125b to negatively regulate the production of inflammatory cytokines. The hijacking of the miRNA machinery controlling innate cell function could be a fundamental mechanism by which worm parasites disarm the early immune responses of their host to ensure successful infection.

Topics & Concepts

Innate immune systemBiologyImmune systemFasciola hepaticaMacrophageHost (biology)microRNAParasite hostingInflammationImmunologyCell biologyMicrovesiclesHelminthsGeneticsGeneComputer scienceIn vitroWorld Wide WebParasites and Host InteractionsParasite Biology and Host InteractionsHelminth infection and control