Defining the early stages of intestinal colonisation by whipworms.
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2022
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Whipworms are large metazoan parasites that inhabit multi-intracellular epithelial tunnels in
the large intestine of their hosts, causing chronic disease in humans and other mammals.
How first-stage larvae invade host epithelia and establish infection remains unclear. Here we
investigate early infection events using both Trichuris muris infections of mice and murine
caecaloids, the first in-vitro system for whipworm infection and organoid model for live
helminths. We show that larvae degrade mucus layers to access epithelial cells. In early
syncytial tunnels, larvae are completely intracellular, woven through multiple live dividing
cells. Using single-cell RNA sequencing of infected mouse caecum, we reveal that progression of infection results in cell damage and an expansion of enterocytes expressing of Isg15,
potentially instigating the host immune response to the whipworm and tissue repair. Our
results unravel intestinal epithelium invasion by whipworms and reveal specific host-parasite
interactions that allow the whipworm to establish its multi-intracellular niche.
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CORREA, M. A. D. et al. Defining the early stages of intestinal colonisation by whipworms. Nature Communications, v. 13, artigo 1725, 2022. Disponível em: <https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-29334-0>. Acesso em: 01 ago. 2023.