| Literature DB >> 29041988 |
Virginia Marugan-Hernandez1, Rebekah Fiddy2, Jazmine Nurse-Francis2, Oliver Smith2, Laura Pritchard2, Fiona M Tomley2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The phylum Apicomplexa comprises a wide variety of parasites of significant medical and economic relevance. These parasites have extremely different host and tissue tropisms; for example Toxoplasma gondii can invade virtually any nucleated cell and infect almost all warm-blooded vertebrates, whereas Eimeria tenella infects only chickens and is restricted in its growth to epithelial cells of the caecum. Proteins released from the microneme secretory organelles (MICs) are critical for apicomplexan invasion of host cells and allow parasites to bind a diverse range of host cell oligosaccharide epitopes. MICs bear modular arrangements of sequences with adhesive proteins and interestingly the sialic-acid binding MAR (microneme adhesive repeat) domain containing proteins (MCPs) are suggested to make significant contributions to the different host and tissue tropisms of T. gondii and E. tenella.Entities:
Keywords: Binding domains; Eimeria tenella; Microneme proteins; Parasite-host interaction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29041988 PMCID: PMC5646145 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-017-2454-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Summary of E. tenella MCPs and their binding properties
| Repeat | Accession number | Motif | Recombinant expression | Fetuin / MDBK binding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EtMCP2.1 | ETH_00020995 | H – L – S | recMCP2.1 | No |
| EtMCP3.1 | ETH_00030520 | H – W – S | – | – |
| EtMCP3.2 | V – W – T | – | – | |
| EtMCP3.3 | H – W – T | recMCP3.3 | Yes | |
| EtMCP4.1 | ETH_00030525 | V – W – S | – | – |
| EtMCP4.2 | H – W – S | recMCP4.2 | No | |
| EtMCP4.3 | V – W – T | recMCP4.3 | Yes | |
| EtMCP4.4 | H – W – T | – | – | |
| EtMCP5.1 | ETH_00003280 | X – X – Xa | – | – |
| EtMCP5.2 | X – X – Xa | recMCP5.2 | No | |
| EtMIC3.1 | ETH_00021010 | Y – L – T | – | – |
| EtMIC3.2 | H – L – T | – | – | |
| EtMIC3.3 | H – L – T | recMIC3.3 | Yes | |
| EtMIC3.4 | H – L – T | – | – | |
| EtMIC3.5 | H – L – T | – | – | |
| EtMIC3.6 | H – L – T | – | – | |
| EtMIC3.7 | X – X – Xa | – | – |
aX – X – X = motif not identifiable
Fig. 1Alignment of MAR domains of EtMIC3 (7 repeats) (a) and four EtMCPs (MCP2, 1 repeat; MCP3, 3 repeats; MCP4, 4 repeats; MCP5, 2 repeats) (b). High/low similarity is represented by different intensities of red/blue, respectively. Green boxes indicate conserved cysteines (C); purple boxes indicate conserved residues; orange boxes indicate LxxY residue within the ɑ-helix/loop extension of MAR type I; yellow boxes indicate HxT/HxS residue coordinating binding to the sialic acid saccharides
Fig. 2Binding assays of recombinant MAR from diverse EtMCPs. Western blotting of eluted or binding fractions after incubation with fetuin (a) or MDBK cells (b). Membranes were incubated with anti-histidine tag antibody as primary antibody and goat anti-mouse IgG antibody HRP conjugate was used as secondary antibody. Arrows indicate positive bands
Fig. 3Fluorescence observed in transgenic populations of E. tenella. a Transiently transfected sporozoites with MDBK cells at 24 h post-infection. Panel 1: pMIC2-mChe transfected sporozoites; mCherry is seen at the apical end whereas mCitrine is detected in the cytosol. Panel 2: pMCP2-mChe transfected sporozoites; mCherry is seen at the apical end part whereas mCitrine is detected in the cytosol. Panel 3: immunofluorescence (IF) of E. tenella wild type sporozoites probed with anti-EtMIC2 and goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated to Alexa Fluor 488. The plasmid constructs for each transfection are displayed above each panel. Arrows indicate the anterior end of sporozoites. b Oocysts of stable transgenic populations Et-MIC2-mChe and Et-MCP2-mChe; mCitrine was observed in the cytosol of encysted sporozoites whereas mCherry accumulated in specific patches (location cannot be assigned due the folded position of the sporozoites within the oocyst). c Sporozoites of stable transgenic populations Et-MIC2-mChe and Et-MCP2-mChe incubated with MDBK cells for 24 h; mCherry was observed at apical end whereas mCitrine was detected the cytosol for both populations. Scale-bars: 5 μm
Fig. 4Analysis of transcript abundance of E. tenella micromene proteins EtMIC2 and EtMIC5, EtActin and EtMCP2. Transcript number per zoite during a time course of intracellular development of parasites were similar for EtMIC2 and EtMCP2. Asrterisks indicate significant differences (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc test). Transcription levels per zoite obtained in free purified sporozoites before invasion are shown