Cargando…

The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella

Eimeria spp. are a highly successful group of intracellular protozoan parasites that develop within intestinal epithelial cells of poultry, causing coccidiosis. As a result of resistance against anticoccidial drugs and the expense of manufacturing live vaccines, it is necessary to understand the rel...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lai, Livia, Bumstead, Janene, Liu, Yan, Garnett, James, Campanero-Rhodes, Maria A., Blake, Damer P., Palma, Angelina S., Chai, Wengang, Ferguson, David J. P., Simpson, Peter, Feizi, Ten, Tomley, Fiona M., Matthews, Stephen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3192848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22022267
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002296
_version_ 1782213808762126336
author Lai, Livia
Bumstead, Janene
Liu, Yan
Garnett, James
Campanero-Rhodes, Maria A.
Blake, Damer P.
Palma, Angelina S.
Chai, Wengang
Ferguson, David J. P.
Simpson, Peter
Feizi, Ten
Tomley, Fiona M.
Matthews, Stephen
author_facet Lai, Livia
Bumstead, Janene
Liu, Yan
Garnett, James
Campanero-Rhodes, Maria A.
Blake, Damer P.
Palma, Angelina S.
Chai, Wengang
Ferguson, David J. P.
Simpson, Peter
Feizi, Ten
Tomley, Fiona M.
Matthews, Stephen
author_sort Lai, Livia
collection PubMed
description Eimeria spp. are a highly successful group of intracellular protozoan parasites that develop within intestinal epithelial cells of poultry, causing coccidiosis. As a result of resistance against anticoccidial drugs and the expense of manufacturing live vaccines, it is necessary to understand the relationship between Eimeria and its host more deeply, with a view to developing recombinant vaccines. Eimeria possesses a family of microneme lectins (MICs) that contain microneme adhesive repeat regions (MARR). We show that the major MARR protein from Eimeria tenella, EtMIC3, is deployed at the parasite-host interface during the early stages of invasion. EtMIC3 consists of seven tandem MAR1-type domains, which possess a high specificity for sialylated glycans as shown by cell-based assays and carbohydrate microarray analyses. The restricted tissue staining pattern observed for EtMIC3 in the chicken caecal epithelium indicates that EtMIC3 contributes to guiding the parasite to the site of invasion in the chicken gut. The microarray analyses also reveal a lack of recognition of glycan sequences terminating in the N-glycolyl form of sialic acid by EtMIC3. Thus the parasite is well adapted to the avian host which lacks N-glycolyl neuraminic acid. We provide new structural insight into the MAR1 family of domains and reveal the atomic resolution basis for the sialic acid-based carbohydrate recognition. Finally, a preliminary chicken immunization trial provides evidence that recombinant EtMIC3 protein and EtMIC3 DNA are effective vaccine candidates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3192848
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31928482011-10-21 The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella Lai, Livia Bumstead, Janene Liu, Yan Garnett, James Campanero-Rhodes, Maria A. Blake, Damer P. Palma, Angelina S. Chai, Wengang Ferguson, David J. P. Simpson, Peter Feizi, Ten Tomley, Fiona M. Matthews, Stephen PLoS Pathog Research Article Eimeria spp. are a highly successful group of intracellular protozoan parasites that develop within intestinal epithelial cells of poultry, causing coccidiosis. As a result of resistance against anticoccidial drugs and the expense of manufacturing live vaccines, it is necessary to understand the relationship between Eimeria and its host more deeply, with a view to developing recombinant vaccines. Eimeria possesses a family of microneme lectins (MICs) that contain microneme adhesive repeat regions (MARR). We show that the major MARR protein from Eimeria tenella, EtMIC3, is deployed at the parasite-host interface during the early stages of invasion. EtMIC3 consists of seven tandem MAR1-type domains, which possess a high specificity for sialylated glycans as shown by cell-based assays and carbohydrate microarray analyses. The restricted tissue staining pattern observed for EtMIC3 in the chicken caecal epithelium indicates that EtMIC3 contributes to guiding the parasite to the site of invasion in the chicken gut. The microarray analyses also reveal a lack of recognition of glycan sequences terminating in the N-glycolyl form of sialic acid by EtMIC3. Thus the parasite is well adapted to the avian host which lacks N-glycolyl neuraminic acid. We provide new structural insight into the MAR1 family of domains and reveal the atomic resolution basis for the sialic acid-based carbohydrate recognition. Finally, a preliminary chicken immunization trial provides evidence that recombinant EtMIC3 protein and EtMIC3 DNA are effective vaccine candidates. Public Library of Science 2011-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3192848/ /pubmed/22022267 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002296 Text en Matthews et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lai, Livia
Bumstead, Janene
Liu, Yan
Garnett, James
Campanero-Rhodes, Maria A.
Blake, Damer P.
Palma, Angelina S.
Chai, Wengang
Ferguson, David J. P.
Simpson, Peter
Feizi, Ten
Tomley, Fiona M.
Matthews, Stephen
The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella
title The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella
title_full The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella
title_fullStr The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella
title_short The Role of Sialyl Glycan Recognition in Host Tissue Tropism of the Avian Parasite Eimeria tenella
title_sort role of sialyl glycan recognition in host tissue tropism of the avian parasite eimeria tenella
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3192848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22022267
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002296
work_keys_str_mv AT lailivia theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT bumsteadjanene theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT liuyan theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT garnettjames theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT campanerorhodesmariaa theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT blakedamerp theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT palmaangelinas theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT chaiwengang theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT fergusondavidjp theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT simpsonpeter theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT feiziten theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT tomleyfionam theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT matthewsstephen theroleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT lailivia roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT bumsteadjanene roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT liuyan roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT garnettjames roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT campanerorhodesmariaa roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT blakedamerp roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT palmaangelinas roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT chaiwengang roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT fergusondavidjp roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT simpsonpeter roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT feiziten roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT tomleyfionam roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella
AT matthewsstephen roleofsialylglycanrecognitioninhosttissuetropismoftheavianparasiteeimeriatenella