| Literature DB >> 27008652 |
Hassan Hakimi1, Junya Yamagishi2,3, Yuto Kegawa1,4, Osamu Kaneko1, Shin-Ichiro Kawazu5, Masahito Asada6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bovine babesiosis is a tick-borne disease caused by several species of Babesia which produce acute and fatal disease in cattle and affect livestock industry worldwide. Babesia ovata is a benign species widespread in east Asian countries and causes anemia, particularly in cattle which are co-infected with Theileria orientalis. The development of genetic manipulation methods is necessary to improve our understanding of the basic biology of protozoan pathogens toward a better control of disease. Such tools have not been developed for B. ovata, and are the aim of this study.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia ovata; Bovine babesiosis; Double cross-over homologous recombination; Stable transfection
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27008652 PMCID: PMC4806448 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1439-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of the plasmids used for transient transfection and evaluation of promoter activity. a Plasmid construct to evaluate the promoter activity and a Renilla luciferase-expressing plasmid for normalization. b Evaluation of the promoter activity of actin 5’NR driving luciferase expression, over a time course of 24–96 h post transfection. c Comparison of luciferase activity in lysates of B. ovata transfected with different constructs at 48 h post transfection. A promoter-less plasmid was used as a negative control. Values from 3 independent transfections are shown. Asterisks indicate statistical significance between promoter-less plasmid (No Promoter) and other promoter candidates by Dunnett’s multiple comparison test (p < 0.001). RLU: Relative luciferase units
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of GFP-expressing plasmid construct, growth inhibition of B. ovata by WR99210 and fluorescence microscopy images of stably expressing GFP B. ovata. a Plasmid construct for stable GFP expression (pBS-EGRADE) showing the recombination sites for integration into the ef-1α locus by homologous double cross-over recombination. The restriction sites for linearization (SalI and SacII) are shown. b Growth inhibition rate of B. ovata in the absence or presence of different concentrations of WR99210. All data are expressed as mean + SEM of triplicate culture. c Live fluorescence microscopy images of GFP-expressing parasites. The pictures are taken from the pBS-EGRADE genome integrated isolate 1. The parasite nucleus was stained with Hoechst33342. Scale-bar: 10 μm
List of primers used to construct GFP-expressing plasmid, pBS-EGRADE
| Primer | Sequence |
|---|---|
| BoefIG2-F-ClaI-IF | AGGTCGACGGT |
| BoefIG2-R-ClaI-IF | ATATCAAGCTT |
| eGFP-F-HindIII-IF | CAAGATCGAT |
| eGFP-R-HindIII-IF | TCCCGATATC |
| BoRAPIG-F-EcoRV-IF | ATCGATAAGCTT |
| BoRAPIG-R-EcoRV-IF | CTGCAGGAATTC |
| BoActin5UTR-F-SmaI-IF | GAATTCCTGCAG |
| BoActin5UTR-R-SmaI-IF | ACTAGTGGATCC |
| hDHFR-F-BamHI-IF | CAAGCCCGGG |
| hDHFR-R-BamHI-IF | ACGTACTAGT |
| Boef3UTR-F-SpeI-IF | CGGGGGATCC |
| Boef3UTR-R-SpeI-IF | CCGCTCTAGA |
| BoADE-F-EcoRI-IF | TACGGATATC |
| BoADE-R-EcoRI-IF | CGGGCTGCA |
Restriction enzyme sites are underlined
Fig. 3Confirmation of the integration of pBS-EGRADE into the ef-1α locus. a Schematic diagram and PCRs to confirm the integration of pBS-EGRADE into ef-1α locus. PCR-1, −2 and −3 are done with primer sets Boef1α-integ-F/eGFP-R-HindIII-IF, hDHFR-F-BamHI-IF/Boef1α-integ-R and Boef1α-F2/Boef1α-integ-R, respectively. b Schematic diagram and Southern blot analysis to confirm the integration of pBS-EGRADE into ef-1α locus. Five microgram of samples genomic DNA were digested with PacI and NotI, and hybridized with gfp and ef-1α 3’NR probes. GI: genome integrated; Episomal: two independent transfectants with circular plasmids; WT: wild type
Fig. 4Growth curve of different lines of B. ovata. Wild type (WT) and genome integrants (GI) were cultured continuously by sub-culturing every 3 days and parasitemia monitored daily