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Título
Peptides Derived of Kunitz-Type Serine Protease Inhibitor as Potential Vaccine Against Experimental Schistosomiasis
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Schistosoma mansoni
helminth vaccines
kunitz-type proteins
synthetic peptide
immunomodulator AA0029
ADAD vaccination system
Clasificación UNESCO
2412 Inmunología
2401.12 Parasitología Animal
3209 Farmacología
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Frontiers Media
Citación
Hernández-Goenaga, J., López-Abán, J., Protasio, A. V., Vicente Santiago, B., Del Olmo, E., Vanegas, M., ... & Muro, A. (2019). Peptides derived of Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitor as potential vaccine against experimental schistosomiasis. Frontiers in immunology, 10, 2498.
Resumen
[EN] Schistosomiasis is a significant public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa, China,
Southeast Asia, and regions of South and Central America affecting about 189 million
people. Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors have been identified as important players in
the interaction of other flatworm parasites with their mammalian hosts. They are involved
in host blood coagulation, fibrinolysis, inflammation, and ion channel blocking, all of them
critical biological processes, which make them interesting targets to develop a vaccine.
Here, we evaluate the protective efficacy of chemically synthesized T- and B-cell peptide
epitopes derived from a kunitz protein from Schistosoma mansoni. Putative kunitz-type
protease inhibitor proteins were identified in the S.mansoni genome, and their expression
was analyzed by RNA-seq. Gene expression analyses showed that the kunitz protein
Smp_147730 (Syn. Smp_311670) was dramatically and significantly up-regulated in
schistosomula and adult worms when compared to the invading cercariae. T- and
B-cell epitopes were predicted using bioinformatics tools, chemically synthesized, and
formulated in the Adjuvant Adaptation (ADAD) vaccination system. BALB/c mice were
vaccinated and challenged with S. mansoni cercariae. Kunitz peptides were highly
protective in vaccinated BALB/c mice showing significant reductions in recovery of adult
females (89–91%) and in the numbers of eggs trapped in the livers (77–81%) and guts
(57–77%) of mice. Moreover, liver lesions were significantly reduced in vaccinated mice
(64–65%) compared to infected control mice. The vaccination regime was well-tolerated
with both peptides. We propose the use of these peptides, alone or in combination, as
reliable candidates for vaccination against schistosomiasis.
URI
DOI
10.3389/fimmu.2019.02498
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