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Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing

Ticks are unique hematophagous arthropods and possess an astounding array of salivary molecules that ensure their unnoticed and prolonged attachment to the host skin. Furthermore, ticks are very effective vectors of a diverse spectrum of pathogens. In order to feed, tick chelicerae cut the host epid...

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Autores principales: Bartíková, Pavlína, Kazimírová, Mária, Štibrániová, Iveta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Library Publishing Media 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7659473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33209253
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author Bartíková, Pavlína
Kazimírová, Mária
Štibrániová, Iveta
author_facet Bartíková, Pavlína
Kazimírová, Mária
Štibrániová, Iveta
author_sort Bartíková, Pavlína
collection PubMed
description Ticks are unique hematophagous arthropods and possess an astounding array of salivary molecules that ensure their unnoticed and prolonged attachment to the host skin. Furthermore, ticks are very effective vectors of a diverse spectrum of pathogens. In order to feed, tick chelicerae cut the host epidermis and their hypostome penetrates through the layers of the skin. As a result of laceration of the skin and rupturing blood vessels, a pool of blood is formed in the dermis, serving for intermittent blood sucking and secretion of saliva. Cutaneous injury caused by tick mouthparts should normally elicit wound healing, a complex biological process coordinated by interaction among different host cells, numerous signalling pathways and by a variety of soluble factors including growth factors. Growth factors, endogenous signalling proteins involved in various biological events, are key players in all phases of the skin repair process. Maintaining feeding site integrity by overcoming sequential phases of wound healing is particularly important for ixodid ticks and is governed by bioactive molecules in their saliva. Tick saliva is a complex mixture of proteins, peptides, and non-peptide molecules and its composition depends on the feeding phase, tick developmental stage, gender and/or the presence/absence of microbial agents. In addition to already demonstrated anti-haemostatic, anti-cytokine and anti-chemokine activities, anti-growth factors activities were also detected in saliva of some tick species. In consequence of counteracting host defences by ticks, tick-borne pathogens can be transmitted to and disseminated in the host. Elucidation of the complex interplay between ticks – pathogens – host cutaneous immunity could lead to improved vector and pathogens control strategies. Additionally, tick saliva bioactive molecules have a promising therapeutic perspective to cure some human diseases associated with dysregulation of specific cytokines/growth factors and alterations in their signalling pathways.
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spelling pubmed-76594732020-11-17 Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing Bartíková, Pavlína Kazimírová, Mária Štibrániová, Iveta J Venom Res Mini-Review Ticks are unique hematophagous arthropods and possess an astounding array of salivary molecules that ensure their unnoticed and prolonged attachment to the host skin. Furthermore, ticks are very effective vectors of a diverse spectrum of pathogens. In order to feed, tick chelicerae cut the host epidermis and their hypostome penetrates through the layers of the skin. As a result of laceration of the skin and rupturing blood vessels, a pool of blood is formed in the dermis, serving for intermittent blood sucking and secretion of saliva. Cutaneous injury caused by tick mouthparts should normally elicit wound healing, a complex biological process coordinated by interaction among different host cells, numerous signalling pathways and by a variety of soluble factors including growth factors. Growth factors, endogenous signalling proteins involved in various biological events, are key players in all phases of the skin repair process. Maintaining feeding site integrity by overcoming sequential phases of wound healing is particularly important for ixodid ticks and is governed by bioactive molecules in their saliva. Tick saliva is a complex mixture of proteins, peptides, and non-peptide molecules and its composition depends on the feeding phase, tick developmental stage, gender and/or the presence/absence of microbial agents. In addition to already demonstrated anti-haemostatic, anti-cytokine and anti-chemokine activities, anti-growth factors activities were also detected in saliva of some tick species. In consequence of counteracting host defences by ticks, tick-borne pathogens can be transmitted to and disseminated in the host. Elucidation of the complex interplay between ticks – pathogens – host cutaneous immunity could lead to improved vector and pathogens control strategies. Additionally, tick saliva bioactive molecules have a promising therapeutic perspective to cure some human diseases associated with dysregulation of specific cytokines/growth factors and alterations in their signalling pathways. Library Publishing Media 2020-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7659473/ /pubmed/33209253 Text en © Copyright The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 This is an open access article, published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0). This license permits non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction of this article, provided the original work is appropriately acknowledged, with correct citation details.
spellingShingle Mini-Review
Bartíková, Pavlína
Kazimírová, Mária
Štibrániová, Iveta
Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
title Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
title_full Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
title_fullStr Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
title_full_unstemmed Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
title_short Ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
title_sort ticks and the effects of their saliva on growth factors involved in skin wound healing
topic Mini-Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7659473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33209253
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