| Literature DB >> 28656101 |
Ángel de la Cruz Pech-Canul1, Victor Monteón2, Rosa-Lidia Solís-Oviedo1,2.
Abstract
Trypanosoma cruzi is the causal agent of Chagas' disease which affects millions of people around the world mostly in Central and South America. T. cruzi expresses a wide variety of proteins on its surface membrane which has an important role in the biology of these parasites. Surface molecules of the parasites are the result of the environment to which the parasites are exposed during their life cycle. Hence, T. cruzi displays several modifications when they move from one host to another. Due to the complexity of this parasite's cell surface, this review presents some membrane proteins organized as large families, as they are the most abundant and/or relevant throughout the T. cruzi membrane.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28656101 PMCID: PMC5474541 DOI: 10.1155/2017/3751403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Parasitol Res ISSN: 2090-0023
Figure 1The different stages of Trypanosoma cruzi. The image depicted the amastigote, epimastigote, and trypomastigote stages from T. cruzi and their membrane domains: nucleus (N); kinetoplast (K); flagellum (F); flagellar pocket (FP); and cell body (CB).
Summary of surface protein families of Trypanosoma cruzi and their characteristics.
| Protein Family | Group | Members | Host | Parasite stage | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| TcMUC | TcMUC I | Mammal | Amastigote and bloodstream trypomastigote | [ |
| TcMUC II | Mammal | Amastigote and bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | ||
| TcMUC III (TSSA) | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | ||
| TcSMUG | TcSMUG S | Insect | Epimastigote and metacyclic trypomastigote | [ | |
| TcSMUG L | Insect | Epimastigote | [ | ||
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| TS I | TCNA | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ |
| SAPA | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | ||
| TS-epi | Insect | Epimastigote | [ | ||
| TS II | ASP-1 and ASP-2 | Mammal | Amastigote | [ | |
| TSA-1, Tc85, and SA85 | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | ||
| GP82 | Insect | Metacyclic trypomastigote | [ | ||
| GP90 | Insect/mammal | Amastigote, bloodstream and metacyclic trypomastigote | [ | ||
| TS III | CRP, FL160, CEA, and TESA | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | |
| TS IV | TsTc13 | Insect | Metacyclic trypomastigote | [ | |
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| TcGP63-I | 61 kDa glycosylated isoform | Insect/Mammal | Epimastigote and amastigote | [ |
| 55 kDa nonglycosylated protein | Insect | Metacyclic trypomastigote | [ | ||
| TcGP63-II | Two transcripts of 2.6 and 2.8 kb | Insect/mammal | Amastigotes, epimastigote, and bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | |
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| Mammal | Present in all life cycle, up-regulated in amastigotes stage | [ |
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| Insect/mammal | Present in all life cycle, upregulated in epimastigote stage | [ | |
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| TcTASV-A | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | |
| TcTASV-B | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | ||
| TcTASV-C | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote | [ | ||
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| Insect/mammal | Amastigote, epimastigote, bloodstream and metacyclic trypomastigote | |||
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| N-cruzipain | Insect | Epimastigote | [ | |
| R-cruzipain 1 (cruzain) | Insect/mammal | Epimastigote, bloodstream trypomastigote and amastigote | [ | ||
| R-cruzipain 2 | Mammal | Bloodstream trypomastigote and amastigote | [ | ||
Figure 2Mucin family. Schematic representation of mature proteins of mucin families TcMUC, found in bloodstream trypomastigotes, and TcSMUG, found in epimastigotes and metacyclic trypomastigotes. Signal peptide (∗); protein fingerprints (white boxes); hypervariable region (---); threonine-rich region (black boxes) and glycosylphosphatidylinositol- (GPI-) anchor signal (shadowed boxes). Image based on Buscaglia and Frasch [30, 60].
Figure 3Trans-sialidase (TS) superfamily. Schematic representation of the four different groups of trans-sialidases (TS) from Trypanosoma cruzi. Characteristic motifs SXDXGTW and VTVXNVXLYNR for TS are depicted as black and shadowed boxes, respectively. The glycosylphosphatidylinositol- (GPI-) anchor signal in the C-terminus position is shown as grey boxes. Tandem repeats (TR) of 12 amino acid residues [DS2AH(S/G)TPSTP(A/V)] are detected in SAPA and TCNA (TR12 inside an open box). Nine amino acid residue repeats [DK2ESESGDSE] are identified in TSA-1 (TR9 inside an open box). A characteristic epitope [TPQRKT2EDRPQ] is present in FL-160 (E12 inside an open box). The pentapeptide [EPKSA] is found once into subfamily I of Group IV (TR5 inside an open box) whereas, in subfamily II, EPKSA is repeatedly present (TRV5 inside an open box indicating the number of repeats). Image based on Colli and Schenkman [61, 62].
Figure 4The TcGP63 family. The TcGP63 family consists of cell surface-localized, zinc-dependent metalloproteases also known as T. cruzi GP63-like proteins. This family has at least two groups: TcGP63-I and TcGP63-II. TcGP63-I members have two potential N-glycosylation sites, whereas TcGP63-II members have three [50]. The glycosylphosphatidylinositol- (GPI-) anchor signal in the C-terminus position is depicted as grey boxes; it is absent in the TcGP63-II members. Predicted N-glycosylation sites are shown in black boxes. Zn-BM: zinc-binding motifs [VXAHEX2HA] associated with metalloprotease activity.
Figure 5Amastin family. Topological model of subfamilies β- and δ-amastins from Trypanosoma cruzi. Amastins models share four predicted transmembrane helices and two extracellular hydrophilic loops. Although both N- and C-termini are predicted to be facing the cytoplasmic space, their length is variable among them. Topology predictions were performed using the “TOPO2, transmembrane protein display software” (http://www.sacs.ucsf.edu/TOPO2).