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Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules

Human babesiosis is caused by the apicomplexan parasite Babesia microti, which is of major public health concern in the United States and elsewhere, resulting in malaise and fatigue, followed by a fever and hemolytic anemia. In this paper we focus on the characterization of a novel B. microti thromb...

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Autores principales: Mousa, Ahmed Abdelmoniem, Roche, Daniel Barry, Terkawi, Mohamad Alaa, Kameyama, Kyohko, Kamyingkird, Ketsarin, Vudriko, Patrick, Salama, Akram, Cao, Shinuo, Orabi, Sahar, Khalifa, Hanem, Ahmed, Mohamed, Attia, Mabrouk, Elkirdasy, Ahmed, Nishikawa, Yoshifumi, Xuan, Xuenan, Cornillot, Emmanuel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5644982/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29040286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185372
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author Mousa, Ahmed Abdelmoniem
Roche, Daniel Barry
Terkawi, Mohamad Alaa
Kameyama, Kyohko
Kamyingkird, Ketsarin
Vudriko, Patrick
Salama, Akram
Cao, Shinuo
Orabi, Sahar
Khalifa, Hanem
Ahmed, Mohamed
Attia, Mabrouk
Elkirdasy, Ahmed
Nishikawa, Yoshifumi
Xuan, Xuenan
Cornillot, Emmanuel
author_facet Mousa, Ahmed Abdelmoniem
Roche, Daniel Barry
Terkawi, Mohamad Alaa
Kameyama, Kyohko
Kamyingkird, Ketsarin
Vudriko, Patrick
Salama, Akram
Cao, Shinuo
Orabi, Sahar
Khalifa, Hanem
Ahmed, Mohamed
Attia, Mabrouk
Elkirdasy, Ahmed
Nishikawa, Yoshifumi
Xuan, Xuenan
Cornillot, Emmanuel
author_sort Mousa, Ahmed Abdelmoniem
collection PubMed
description Human babesiosis is caused by the apicomplexan parasite Babesia microti, which is of major public health concern in the United States and elsewhere, resulting in malaise and fatigue, followed by a fever and hemolytic anemia. In this paper we focus on the characterization of a novel B. microti thrombospondin domain (TSP1)-containing protein (BmP53) from the new annotation of the B. microti genome (locus 'BmR1_04g09041'). This novel protein (BmP53) had a single TSP1 and a transmembrane domain, with a short cytoplasmic tail containing a sub-terminal glutamine residue, but no signal peptide and Von Willebrand factor type A domains (VWA), which are found in classical thrombospondin-related adhesive proteins (TRAP). Co-localization assays of BmP53 and Babesia microti secreted antigen 1 (BmSA1) suggested that BmP53 might be a non-secretory membranous protein. Molecular mimicry between the TSP1 domain from BmP53 and host platelets molecules was indicated through different measures of sequence homology, phylogenetic analysis, 3D structure and shared epitopes. Indeed, hamster isolated platelets cross-reacted with mouse anti-BmP53-TSP1. Molecular mimicry are used to help parasites to escape immune defenses, resulting in immune evasion or autoimmunity. Furthermore, specific host reactivity was also detected against the TSP1-free part of BmP53 in infected hamster sera. In conclusion, the TSP1 domain mimicry might help in studying the mechanisms of parasite-induced thrombocytopenia, with the TSP1-free truncate of the protein representing a potential safe candidate for future vaccine studies.
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spelling pubmed-56449822017-10-30 Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules Mousa, Ahmed Abdelmoniem Roche, Daniel Barry Terkawi, Mohamad Alaa Kameyama, Kyohko Kamyingkird, Ketsarin Vudriko, Patrick Salama, Akram Cao, Shinuo Orabi, Sahar Khalifa, Hanem Ahmed, Mohamed Attia, Mabrouk Elkirdasy, Ahmed Nishikawa, Yoshifumi Xuan, Xuenan Cornillot, Emmanuel PLoS One Research Article Human babesiosis is caused by the apicomplexan parasite Babesia microti, which is of major public health concern in the United States and elsewhere, resulting in malaise and fatigue, followed by a fever and hemolytic anemia. In this paper we focus on the characterization of a novel B. microti thrombospondin domain (TSP1)-containing protein (BmP53) from the new annotation of the B. microti genome (locus 'BmR1_04g09041'). This novel protein (BmP53) had a single TSP1 and a transmembrane domain, with a short cytoplasmic tail containing a sub-terminal glutamine residue, but no signal peptide and Von Willebrand factor type A domains (VWA), which are found in classical thrombospondin-related adhesive proteins (TRAP). Co-localization assays of BmP53 and Babesia microti secreted antigen 1 (BmSA1) suggested that BmP53 might be a non-secretory membranous protein. Molecular mimicry between the TSP1 domain from BmP53 and host platelets molecules was indicated through different measures of sequence homology, phylogenetic analysis, 3D structure and shared epitopes. Indeed, hamster isolated platelets cross-reacted with mouse anti-BmP53-TSP1. Molecular mimicry are used to help parasites to escape immune defenses, resulting in immune evasion or autoimmunity. Furthermore, specific host reactivity was also detected against the TSP1-free part of BmP53 in infected hamster sera. In conclusion, the TSP1 domain mimicry might help in studying the mechanisms of parasite-induced thrombocytopenia, with the TSP1-free truncate of the protein representing a potential safe candidate for future vaccine studies. Public Library of Science 2017-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5644982/ /pubmed/29040286 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185372 Text en © 2017 Mousa 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mousa, Ahmed Abdelmoniem
Roche, Daniel Barry
Terkawi, Mohamad Alaa
Kameyama, Kyohko
Kamyingkird, Ketsarin
Vudriko, Patrick
Salama, Akram
Cao, Shinuo
Orabi, Sahar
Khalifa, Hanem
Ahmed, Mohamed
Attia, Mabrouk
Elkirdasy, Ahmed
Nishikawa, Yoshifumi
Xuan, Xuenan
Cornillot, Emmanuel
Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules
title Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules
title_full Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules
title_fullStr Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules
title_full_unstemmed Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules
title_short Human babesiosis: Indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel Babesia microti BmP53 protein and host platelets molecules
title_sort human babesiosis: indication of a molecular mimicry between thrombospondin domains from a novel babesia microti bmp53 protein and host platelets molecules
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5644982/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29040286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185372
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