| Literature DB >> 25674091 |
Barbara Castro-Pimentel Figueiredo1, Natasha Delaqua Ricci1, Natan Raimundo Gonçalves de Assis1, Suellen Batistoni de Morais1, Cristina Toscano Fonseca2, Sergio Costa Oliveira1.
Abstract
Schistosomiasis is a debilitating disease that represents a major health problem in at least 74 tropical and subtropical countries. Current disease control strategies consist mainly of chemotherapy, which cannot prevent recurrent re-infection of people living in endemic area. In the last decades, many researchers made a remarkable effort in the search for an effective vaccine to provide long-term protection. Parasitic platyhelminthes of Schistosoma genus, which cause the disease, live in the blood vessels of definitive hosts where they are bathed in host blood for many years. Among the most promising molecules as vaccine candidates are the proteins present in the host-parasite interface, so numerous tegument antigens have been assessed and the achieved protection never got even close to 100%. Besides the tegument, the digestive tract is the other major site of host-parasite interface. Since parasites feed on blood, they need to swallow a considerable amount of blood for nutrient acquisition. Host blood ingested by schistosomes passes through the esophagus and reaches the gut where many peptidases catalyze the proteolysis of blood cells. Recent studies show the emergence of antigens related to the parasite blood feeding, such as esophageal gland proteins, proteases, and other proteins related to nutrient uptake. Herein, we review what is known about Schistosoma mansoni digestive tract proteins, emphasizing the ones described as potential vaccine candidates.Entities:
Keywords: Schistosoma mansoni; digestive tract; esophageal gland; gastrodermis; proteases; vaccine
Year: 2015 PMID: 25674091 PMCID: PMC4309203 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Digestive tract antigens.
| Localization | Antigen | Vaccine formulation | Functions likely affected by vaccination | Worm burden reduction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Esophageal gland | Sm10.3 | Recombinant protein | Initial blood processing | 32% |
| Gut lumen | Cathepsin B | Recombinant protein | Hemoglobin processing | Up to 84% |
| SmAE | DNA vaccine | Hemoglobin processing | None | |
| Cathepsin D | Synthetic peptides | Apical processing of hemoglobin | – | |
| Gastrodermis | Superoxide dismutase | DNA vaccine | Antioxidant mechanisms; protection from hemoglobin oxidation products | Up to 54% |
| Syntenin | Recombinant protein | Cellular trafficking and biogenesis of small extracellular vesicles | Up to 37% | |
| Saposin | Recombinant protein | Lipid binding, transport, and uptake | None |
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Figure 1Schematic representation of . Esophagus is represented in red, esophageal glands are green, gut lumen is black, and gastrodermis is gray. The reproductive organs, which are surrounded by the bifurcated gut, are represented in blue. The tegument is brown, as well as the oral and ventral suckers. The antigens are listed under the location they were identified in italics. Superoxide dismutase was identified both in the tegument and in the digestive tract.