| Literature DB >> 21385450 |
A Fontaine1, A Pascual, I Diouf, N Bakkali, S Bourdon, T Fusai, C Rogier, L Almeras.
Abstract
Mosquito salivary proteins are involved in several biological processes that facilitate their blood feeding and have also been reported to elicit an IgG response in vertebrates. A growing number of studies have focused on this immunological response for its potential use as a biological marker of exposure to arthropod bites. As mosquito saliva collection is extremely laborious and inefficient, most research groups prefer to work on mosquito salivary glands (SGs). Thus, SG protein integrity is a critical factor in obtaining meaningful data from immunological and biochemical analysis. Current methodologies rely on an immediate freezing of SGs after their collection. However, the maintenance of samples in a frozen environment can be hard to achieve in field conditions. In this study, SG proteins from two mosquito species (Aedes aegypti and Anopheles gambiae s.s.) stored in different media for 5 days at either +4°C or room temperature (RT) were evaluated at the quantitative (i.e., ELISA) and qualitative (i.e., SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting) levels. Our results indicated that PBS medium supplemented with an anti-protease cocktail seems to be the best buffer to preserve SG antigens for 5 days at +4°C for ELISA analysis. Conversely, cell-lysis buffer (Urea-Thiourea-CHAPS-Tris) was best at preventing protein degradation both at +4°C and RT for further qualitative analysis. These convenient storage methods provide an alternative to freezing and are expected to be applicable to other biological samples collected in the field.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21385450 PMCID: PMC3068118 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-4-33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Scatter plot graphs of human IgG responses from exposed (E) and non-exposed (NE) individuals against . Antibody responses are represented by aOD: mean OD value of wells with salivary antigen minus mean OD value of wells without salivary antigen. Each point shows the aOD value for a single individual. Horizontal bars show medians. Differences between the reference sample (salivary glands collected on ice and store fresh at -20°C) and other preservation conditions were tested using Wilcoxon signed-rank test. p-values are indicated only when significant differences were observed. Ref. S: reference sample; CBL: cell lysis buffer.
Figure 2Comparison of (A) Comparative An. gambiae salivary gland (SG) protein profiles between different preservation conditions. Salivary gland proteins were separated on 12% SDS-PAGE gels. Each protein profile corresponds to a distinct preservation condition. Lane 1: SG dissected on ice and stored at -20°C in PBS (reference); lane 2: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at 4°C in PBS containing protease inhibitor cocktail (PBSpi); lane 3: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at RT in PBSpi; lane 4: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at 4°C in cell lysis buffer; lane 5: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at RT in cell lysis buffer. Standard molecular weights (MW) are indicated at the left side in kilodaltons (kDa). (B) Schematic representations of densitometric protein profiles from the 5 salivary gland preservation conditions. The line color corresponds to the colored box used at the top of each protein profile. The arrow head indicates the band that was used for abundance comparison. A.U.: Arbitrary Unit. R.f.: Relative front of migration. (C) IgG immune profiles against An. gambiae salivary gland proteins using the pooled sera from exposed individuals. The immunoblots were performed by transferring the SDS-PAGE gel shown in (A) onto a nitrocellulose membrane. Antigenic bands detected only in samples preserved in cell lysis buffer are indicated with an asterisk (*).
Figure 3Comparison of (A) Comparative Ae. aegypti salivary gland (SG) protein profiles between different preservation conditions. Salivary gland proteins were separated on 12% SDS-PAGE gels. Each protein profile corresponds to a distinct preservation condition. Lane 1: SG dissected on ice and stored at -20°C in PBS (reference); lane 2: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at 4°C in PBS containing a protease inhibitor cocktail (PBSpi); lane 3: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at RT in PBSpi; lane 4: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at 4°C in cell lysis buffer; lane 5: SG dissected at RT and stored 5 days at RT in cell lysis buffer. Standard molecular weights (MW) are indicated at the left side in kilodaltons (kDa). (B) Schematic representations of densitometric protein profiles from the 5 salivary gland preservation conditions. The line color corresponds to the colored box used at the top of each protein profile. A.U.: Arbitrary Unit. R.f.: Relative front of migration. (C) IgG immune profiles against Ae. aegypti salivary gland proteins using the pooled sera from exposed individuals. The immunoblots were performed by transferring the SDS-PAGE gel shown in (A) onto a nitrocellulose membrane. Antigenic bands detected only in samples preserved in cell lysis buffer are indicated with an asterisk (*).