| Literature DB >> 28296924 |
Jana Řimnáčová1, Libor Mikeš1, Libuše Turjanicová1, Jana Bulantová1, Petr Horák1.
Abstract
The invasive larvae (cercariae) of schistosomes penetrate the skin of their definitive hosts. During the invasion, they undergo dramatic ultrastructural and physiological transitions. These changes result in the development of the subsequent stage, schistosomulum, which migrates through host tissues in close contact with host's immune system. One of the striking changes in the transforming cercariae is the shedding of their thick tegumental glycocalyx, which represents an immunoattractive structure; therefore its removal helps cercariae to avoid immune attack. A set of commercial fluorescently labeled lectin probes, their saccharide inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies against the trisaccharide Lewis-X antigen (LeX, CD15) were used to characterize changes in the surface saccharide composition of the neuropathogenic avian schistosome Trichobilharzia regenti during the transformation of cercariae to schistosomula, both in vitro and in vivo. The effect of various lectins on glycocalyx shedding was evaluated microscopically. The involvement of peptidases and their inhibitors on the shedding of glycocalyx was investigated using T. regenti recombinant cathepsin B2 and a set of peptidase inhibitors. The surface glycocalyx of T. regenti cercariae was rich in fucose and mannose/glucose residues. After the transformation of cercariae in vitro or in vivo within their specific duck host, reduction and vanishing of these epitopes was observed, and galactose/N-acetylgalactosamine emerged. The presence of LeX was not observed on the cercariae, but the antigen was gradually expressed from the anterior part of the body in the developing schistosomula. Some lectins which bind to the cercarial surface also induced secretion from the acetabular penetration glands. Seven lectins induced the shedding of glycocalyx by cercariae, among which five bound strongly to cercarial surface; the effect could be blocked by saccharide inhibitors. Mannose-binding protein, part of the lectin pathway of the complement system, also bound to cercariae and schistosomula, but had little effect on glycocalyx shedding. Our study did not confirm the involvement of proteolysis in glycocalyx shedding.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28296924 PMCID: PMC5351870 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Lectins, saccharide inhibitors, and binding preferences of lectins.
| Lectin | Abbreviation | Inhibitor | Binding preferences (terminal sequences) |
|---|---|---|---|
| LTA | Fuc | Fucα1→2Galβ1→ | |
| UEA-I | Fuc | Fucα1→2Galβ1→>(GlcNAcβ1→4)n>GalNAcα1→3Galβ1→> GlcNAcβ1→6Gal>Galβ1→3GlcNAcβ1→3Galβ1→4Glc | |
| LCA | MetMan/MetGlc | Manα1→> Glcα1→>> GlcNAc; Fucα1→6GlcNAc | |
| ConA | MetMan/MetGlc | Manα1→> Glcα1→> GlcNAcα1→ | |
| PSA | MetMan/MetGlc | Manα1→> Glcα1→>> GlcNAc; Fucα1→6GlcNAc | |
| STA | oligo GlcNAc (β1→4) | branched and linear poly-LacNAc, (GlcNAc)n | |
| WGA | oligo GlcNAc (β1→4) | (GlcNAcβ1→4)n > GlcNAcβ1 →4>NeuNAc | |
| SBA | GalNAc | GalNAcα,β1→ >>Fucα1→2Galβ1 > Gal | |
| HPA | GalNAc | GalNAcα1→ > GalNAc > GlcNAc > α-Gal | |
| RCA-I | Gal, Lac | Galβ1→4GlcNAc > β-Gal >α-Gal >GalNAc | |
| GSL-I | Gal/GalNAc | α-GalNAc, α-Gal | |
| PNA | Gal | Galβ1→3GalNAc >>Galβ1→4GlcNAc>Gal = Galβ1→3GlcNAc | |
| JAC | GalNAc, Mel | polyspecific lectin, Galβ1→3GalNAcα1 →Ser/Thr, GalNAcα1 →Ser/Thr | |
| MBL | Man/Glc | polyspecific lectin, GlcNAc→Man→ManNAc, Fuc →maltose→Glc→Gal, GalNAc |
Abbreviations in Table 1
Fuc–L-fucose, Gal–D-galactose, GalNAc–N-acetyl-D-galactosamine, Glc–D-glucose, GlcNAc–N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, Lac– α-lactose, Man–D-mannose, Mel–melibiose, MetMan– α-D-methylmanopyranoside, MetGlc– α-D-methylglucopyranoside, NeuNAc–N-acetylneuraminic acid, poly-LacNAc–poly-N-acetyllactosamine, Ser–serine, Thr–threonine
Lectin binding to the surface of T. regenti cercariae and schistosomula obtained from infected ducks and after in vitro transformation.
| LECTIN | CERCARIAE | 1.5 h ( | 3 h ( | 1 day ( | 1 day ( | 3 days ( | 3 days ( | 5 days ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ++ | +/- | +/- | - | - | - | - | - | |
| ++ | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| ++ | (+) | (+) | (+) | - | (+) | (+) | (+) | |
| ++ | (+) | (+) | (+) | + | (+) | (+) | (+) | |
| ++ | + | + | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | |
| + | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | + | |
| - | + | + | + | + | (+) | + | (+) | |
| - | - | - | (+) | - | (+) | - | - | |
| - | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | + | ++ | + | |
| (+) | - | + | + | (+) | + | + | + | |
| ++ | + | + | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | + | |
| - | + | + | + | + | + | + | - | |
| (+) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | + |
Evaluation of fluorescence
++ strong reaction, + moderate reaction, (+) weak reaction,—no reaction
* non-specific reaction
lectin marker of transformation, +/- some larvae, depending on the transformation rate, exhibited different reaction, 0 not tested.
Fig 1Reaction of human recombinant mannan-binding lectin with the surface of T. regenti larvae.
(A) cercaria. (B) schistosomulum from duck spinal cord 5 days post infection. Prior to immunochemistry, parasites were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde. Scale bars 50 μm.
Fig 2Detection of Lewis X antigen on the surface of T. regenti larvae by immunocytochemistry with anti-CD15 mAb.
(A-F) schistosomula from specific definitive hosts (ducks): (A) 1-day-old schistosomula ex vivo, LeX is present only on the anterior surface of one of two larvae of the same age; arrow points to the anterior part of the schistosomulum not reacting with mAb. (B) view of two schistosomula from”A” by light microscopy. (C+D) 3-days-old schistosomula ex vivo. (E) 5-days-old schistosomulum ex vivo. (F) 7-days-old schistosomulum ex vivo. (G) 7-days-old schistosomulum ex vivo from a non-specific host (mouse). (H) cercaria–mAb bound only to the secretions of cercarial penetration glands. (I) 3-days-old schistosomulum transformed in vitro. AP anterior part of larva, A acetabulum, S secretions of penetration glands. Scale bars 50 μm.
Fig 3Formation of a “shedding tunnel” from secretions of the penetration glands and glycocalyx in T. regenti cercariae after stimulation with linoleic acid.
(A+B) circumacetabular gland content and secretions lining the shedding tunnel, stained by alizarine. (C+D) lithium carmine-stained postacetabular gland secretions expelled from the glands and lining the shedding tunnel. (E+F) shedding tunnel labeled by fluorescent LTA and loss of lectin ligands on cercarial surface. CG circumacetabular glands, ST shedding tunnel, A acetabulum, AP anterior part of cercaria. Scale bars 50 μm.
Fig 4Adhesion of penetration gland secretions to the surface of cercariae penetrating duck skin.
Scanning electron micrographs. (A) two cercariae penetrating the skin at the same site. (B) cercaria attached to the skin by gland secretions. ST shedding tunnel around the surface of cercaria, GS acetabular gland secretions adhered to host skin. Scale bars 50 μm.
Lectin stimulation of penetration gland emptying and the shedding of glycocalyx in T. regenti cercariae.
| LECTIN | BINDING TO CERCARIAL SURFACE | BINDING TO SECRETIONS | INDUCTION OF GLAND SECRETION | GLYCOCALYX SHEDDING |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ++ | ++ | ++++ | YES ++ | |
| ++ | ++ | ++++ | YES ++ | |
| ++ | ++ | +++ | YES + | |
| ++ | ++ | ++++ | YES + | |
| ++ | ++ | ++++ | NO | |
| - | ++ | ++ | NO | |
| + | ++ | +++ | NO | |
| - | ++ | ++++ | YES + | |
| - | ++ | ++++ | NO | |
| - | ++ | ++++ | NO | |
| (+) | ++ | +++ | NO | |
| ++ | ++ | +++ | YES ++ | |
| - | ++ | ++ | NO | |
| 0 | 0 | ++ | YES + |
Evaluation of fluorescence
++ strong reaction, + moderate reaction, (+) weak reaction,—no reaction
* non-specific reaction, 0 not tested. The final concentration of lectins was 20 μg/ml.
Evaluation of the intensity of secretion from penetration glands, and glycocalyx shedding.
++++ very strong intensity, +++ strong intensity, ++ moderate intensity, + weak intensity. The intensity takes into account the speed of these processes and the proportion of cercariae which entered this phase on each slide.
Fig 5Glycocalyx shedding by T. regenti cercaria after stimulation with JAC lectin.
(A) anterior half of cercarial body shed the glycocalyx. (B) a ring of glycocalyx with bound lectin was shed from the anterior part of body and rolled over the posterior part and the tail stem. ST shed glycocalyx, AP anterior part of cercaria/schistosomulum body, A acetabulum. Scale bars 50 μm.
Effects of lectin/saccharide combinations on cercariae of T. regenti
| LECTIN | SACCHARIDE | BINDING TO SURFACE | GLYCOCALYX SHEDDING |
|---|---|---|---|
| - | N | ||
| (+) | 50% | ||
| ++ | Y | ||
| - | N | ||
| - | 20% | ||
| - | 25% | ||
| - | N | ||
| + | 50% | ||
| + | 50% | ||
| - | N | ||
| (+) | 20% | ||
| - | N | ||
| - | N | ||
| - | 33% | ||
| - | 33% | ||
| - | N | ||
| ++ | 60% | ||
| ++ | N | ||
| 0 | 10% | ||
| 0 | 20% | ||
| 0 | 20% |
Evaluation of fluorescence.
++ strong reaction, + moderate reaction, (+) weak reaction,—no reaction, 0 not tested, Y shedding recorded, N shedding absent, % proportion of cercariae undergoing the process.