Fasciola hepatica surface tegument: glycoproteins at the interface of parasite and host


Autoria(s): Ravida, Alessandra; Cwiklinski, Krystyna; Aldridge, Allison M; Clarke, Paul; Thompson, Roisin; Gerlach, Jared Q; Kilcoyne, Michelle; Hokke, Cornelis H; Dalton, John P; O'Neill, Sandra M
Data(s)

27/07/2016

Resumo

<p>Fasciola hepatica, commonly known as liver fluke, is a trematode which causes Fasciolosis in ruminants and humans. The outer tegumental coat of F. hepatica (FhTeg) is a complex metabolically active biological matrix that is continually exposed to the host immune system and therefore makes a good vaccine target. F. hepatica tegumental coat is highly glycosylated and helminth-derived immunogenic oligosaccharide motifs and glycoproteins are currently being investigated as novel vaccine candidates. This report presents the first systematic characterisation of FhTeg glycosylation using lectin microarrays to characterise carbohydrates motifs present, and lectin histochemistry to localize these on the F. hepatica tegument. We discovered that FhTeg glycoproteins are predominantly oligomannose oligosaccharides that are expressed on the spines, suckers and tegumental coat of F. hepatica and lectin blot analysis confirmed the abundance of N- glycosylated proteins. While some oligosaccharides are widely distributed on the fluke surface other subsets are restricted to distinct anatomical regions. We selectively enriched for FhTeg mannosylated glycoprotein subsets using lectin affinity chromatography and identified 369 proteins by mass spectrometric analysis. Among these proteins are a number of potential vaccine candidates with known immune modulatory properties including proteases, protease inhibitors, paramyosin, Venom Allergen-like II, Enolase and two proteins, nardilysin and TRIL, that have not been previously associated with F. hepatica Furthermore, we provide a comprehensive insight regarding the putative glycosylation of FhTeg components which could highlight the importance of further studies examining glycoconjugates in host-parasite interactions in the context of F. hepatica infection and the development of an effective vaccine.</p>

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/fasciola-hepatica-surface-tegument-glycoproteins-at-the-interface-of-parasite-and-host(8543d9f7-403c-46d7-a091-069c04c8d2c2).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M116.059774

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/ws/files/93995940/Fasciola_hepatica_surface_tegument.pdf

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Ravida , A , Cwiklinski , K , Aldridge , A M , Clarke , P , Thompson , R , Gerlach , J Q , Kilcoyne , M , Hokke , C H , Dalton , J P & O'Neill , S M 2016 , ' Fasciola hepatica surface tegument: glycoproteins at the interface of parasite and host ' Molecular and Cellular Proteomics . DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M116.059774

Tipo

article