| Literature DB >> 28114888 |
Jose Rojas-Caraballo1,2,3, Julio López-Abán1, Darwin Andrés Moreno-Pérez2,4, Belén Vicente1, Pedro Fernández-Soto1, Esther Del Olmo5, Manuel Alfonso Patarroyo2,4, Antonio Muro6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fasciolosis remains a significant food-borne trematode disease causing high morbidity around the world and affecting grazing animals and humans. A deeper understanding concerning the molecular mechanisms by which Fasciola hepatica infection occurs, as well as the molecular basis involved in acquiring protection is extremely important when designing and selecting new vaccine candidates. The present study provides a first report of microarray-based technology for describing changes in the splenic gene expression profile for mice immunised with a highly effective, protection-inducing, multi-epitope, subunit-based, chemically-synthesised vaccine candidate against F. hepatica.Entities:
Keywords: Epitope; Fasciolosis; Gene expression; Immunology; Microarrays; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28114888 PMCID: PMC5259852 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2205-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Immunoprotection in mice immunised with the synthetic peptides. a Kaplan-Meier curves depicting survival rates in mice immunised with any combination of peptides containing B- and T-cell epitopes as vaccine candidates which had also been orally infected with F. hepatica metacercariae. The survival rates of mice from both untreated and infected controls are also represented. The humane endpoint was established when an indicator of severe pain, excessive distress, suffering or an impending death was observed in any animal which was then euthanised with an intraperitoneal injection of pentobarbital at 100 mg/kg using 30 g needles. b Representative macroscopic lesion in infected mice (group 1, upper part) compared to mice immunised with a combination of peptides containing T-cell epitopes (T14 + T15 + T16; group 6, lower part)
Assessing macroscopic hepatic lesions in CD1 mice
| Group | Treatment | Lesion score (mean ± SEM) | Reduction (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Untreated uninfected | ||
| 2 | Infected | 12.0 ± 1.5 | |
| 3 | Adjuvant treated | 9.3 ± 1.8 | 22 |
| 4 | B6 + T14 | 8.3 ± 1.8 | 31 |
| 5 | B1 + B5 + B6 | 10.3 ± 1.6 | 14 |
| 6 | T14 + T15 + T16 | 6.6 ± 0.6 | 45* |
| 7 | B1 + B2 + B5 + B6 + T14 + T15 + T16 | 7.3 ± 1.3 | 39* |
The mice were immunised with combinations of synthetic peptides containing B- and T-cell epitopes using the ADAD vaccination system which had been orally challenged with 7 F. hepatica metacercariae
*p < 0.05 compared to infected controls
Fig. 2Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) showing the most representative canonical pathways associated with immune responses in the spleen of mice immunised with a combination of peptides containing T-cell epitopes (T14, T15 and T16). The figure shows the number of genes being differentially expressed compared to the untreated control group. Red represents the number of up-regulated genes whilst green represents down-regulated ones
Genes having the highest differential expression associated with immune response-related pathways
| Gene symbol | Description |
| Fold change | Associated pathway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S100A8 | S100 calcium binding protein A8 | 1.62E-03 | 5.934 | IL12 signalling and production in macrophages |
| Production of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species | ||||
| MMP9 | Matrix metallopeptidase 9 | 3.07E-03 | 4.501 | IL8 signalling |
| Leukocyte extravasation signalling | ||||
| CXCR2 | Chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 2 | 3.39E-04 | 3.401 | IL8 signalling |
| IFITM1 | Interferon induced transmembrane protein 1 | 2.13E-03 | 2.375 | IFN signalling |
| CCR3 | Chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 3 Gene | 1.31E-03 | 1.655 | CCR3 signalling in eosinophils |
| Chemokine signalling | ||||
| ACTA2 | Actin, alpha 2, smooth muscle, aorta | 1.77E-03 | 1.640 | Crosstalk between DC and NK cells |
| Leukocyte extravasation signalling | ||||
| Integrin signalling | ||||
| TAB1 | Mitogen-activated protein kinase 7 interacting protein 1 | 2.82E-03 | 1.276 | iNOS signalling |
| NF-kB signalling | ||||
| IL10 signalling | ||||
| Toll-like receptor signalling | ||||
| CD40LG | CD40 ligand | 1.41E-03 | −1.740 | T helper cell differentiation |
| CD40 signalling | ||||
| IL12 signalling and production in macrophages | ||||
| NF-kB signalling | ||||
| JUN | Jun oncogene | 4.08E-03 | −1.587 | CD28 signalling in T helper cells |
| IL12 signalling and production in macrophages | ||||
| Production of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species | ||||
| T-cell receptor signalling | ||||
| iNOS signalling | ||||
| IL8 signalling | ||||
| IL10 signalling | ||||
| PLCG1 | phospholipase C, gamma 1 | 5.33E-03 | −1.541 | iCOS-iCOSL signalling in T-helper cells |
| PCK signalling in T-lymphocytes | ||||
| Production of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species | ||||
| Phospholipase C signalling | ||||
| IL15 signalling | ||||
| PRKCQ | protein kinase C, theta | 3.14E-03 | −1.461 | T-cell receptor signalling |
| CCR5 signalling in macrophages | ||||
| Natural killer cells signalling | ||||
| Apoptosis signalling | ||||
| B-cell receptor signalling | ||||
| PRKD3 | protein kinase D3 | 6.26E-03 | −1.440 | Calcium-induced T-lymphocyte apoptosis |
| LPS stimulated MAPK signalling | ||||
| CCR5 signalling in macrophages | ||||
| CCR3 signalling in eosinophils | ||||
| CXCR4 signalling |
The genes analysed here were used when comparing non-immunised mice to mice immunised with a combination of T-cell-epitope-containing peptides (T14 + T15 + T16)
Fig. 3The biological process involved in spleen differentially expressed genes compared to the non-immunised control group. a The total number of genes is showed in parentheses and the significance of each biological process is indicated by its p value. b The amount of both up- and down- differentially expressed genes is indicated for each biological process. Red represents the amount of up-regulated genes whilst green represents down-regulated ones
Fig. 4The most representative signalling pathways and their associated up- and down-regulated genes are represented. The fold change of each gene is shown in parenthesis. The significance (−log p value) of each signalling pathway is also indicated by the scale to the right of the graph. Signalling pathway analysis was done only in the group of mice immunised with the combination of peptides containing T-cell epitopes (T14, T15, T16). Red and green squares represent genes belonging to each signalling pathway, whereas gray squares indicate absence of those genes in that pathway
Fig. 5The microarrays were validated by using PCR reactions. Panel a depicts up-regulated genes and panel b down-regulated genes. Lane 1 represents the corresponding PCR amplification of the indicated gene from untreated mice and lane 2 represents the corresponding PCR amplification of the indicated gene from the immunised mouse group. Each mouse’s RNA was pooled and used for RT-PCR and the genes for validation were randomly assigned. The results are representative of three individual experiments. MWM: Molecular Weight Marker