Upregulated Expression of B-Cell Antigen Family Tandem Repeat Proteins by
Leishmania
Amastigotes
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Published:2010-05
Issue:5
Volume:78
Page:2138-2145
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ISSN:0019-9567
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Container-title:Infection and Immunity
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Infect Immun
Author:
Goto Yasuyuki123, Carter Darrick23, Guderian Jeffrey2, Inoue Noboru1, Kawazu Shin-Ichiro1, Reed Steven G.2
Affiliation:
1. National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Inada-cho, Obihiro, Hokkaido 080-8555, Japan 2. Infectious Disease Research Institute, 1124 Columbia Street, Suite 400, Seattle, Washington 98104 3. Protein Advances Inc., 1102 Columbia Street, Suite 107, Seattle, Washington 98104
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Proteins with tandem repeat (TR) domains have been found in various protozoan parasites, and they are often targets of B-cell responses. Through systematic analyses of whole proteomes, we recently demonstrated that two trypanosomatid parasites,
Leishmania infantum
and
Trypanosoma cruzi
, are rich in antigenic proteins with large TR domains. However, the reason that these proteins are antigenic was unclear. Here, by performing molecular, immunological, and bioinformatic characterizations of
Leishmania
TR proteins, we found two possible factors affecting the antigenicity of these proteins; one factor is their fundamental composition as TR proteins, and the other is regulation of their expression by parasites. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) using recombinant proteins revealed that the copy number of the repeat affects the affinity of binding between antigens and antibodies, as expected based on thermodynamic binding kinetics. Other than containing TR domains, the TR proteins do not share characteristics, such as sequence similarity or biased cellular location predicted by the presence of a signal sequence(s) and/or a transmembrane domain(s). However, the TR proteome contained a higher percentage of proteins upregulated in amastigotes than the whole proteome, and upregulated expression of a TR protein seemed to affect its antigenicity. These results indicate that
Leishmania
parasites actively utilize the TR protein family for parasitism in mammalian hosts.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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