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Ticks obtain a blood meal by lacerating small blood vessels and ingesting the blood that flows to the feeding site, which triggers various host responses. However, ticks face the challenge of wound healing, a process involving hemostasis, inflammation, cell proliferation and migration, and remodeling, hindering blood acquisition. To overcome these obstacles, tick salivary glands produce an array of bioactive molecules. Here, we characterize ixochymostatin, an Ixodes scapularis protein belonging to the trypsin inhibitor-like (TIL) family. It is expressed in multiple developmental stages and in tick salivary glands and acts as a slow and tight-binding inhibitor of chymase, cathepsin G, and chymotrypsin. Predictions for the tertiary structure complex between ixochymostatin and chymase suggest a direct interaction between the inhibitor reactive site loop and protease active sites. In vitro, ixochymostatin protects the endothelial cell barrier against chymase degrading action, decreasing cell permeability. In vivo, it reduces vascular permeability induced by chymase and compound 48/80, a mast cell degranulator agonist, in a mouse model. Additionally, ixochymostatin inhibits the chymase-dependent generation of vasoconstrictor peptides. Antibodies against ixochymostatin neutralize its inhibitory properties, with epitope mapping identifying potential neutralization regions. Ixochymostatin emerges as a novel tick protein modulating host responses against tick feeding, facilitating blood acquisition.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.137949 | DOI Listing |
Pestic Biochem Physiol
March 2025
Department of Experimental Biology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, 625 00 Brno, Czech Republic.
Entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) are biological control agents that naturally kill insect pests, providing an eco-friendly alternative to chemical pesticides. Despite extensive research, the mechanisms behind the recovery process, where infective juveniles (IJs) transition to a parasitic state upon contact with the host, remain unclear. This study investigates the stimulatory effect of insect-derived materials on the recovery of Heterorhabditis bacteriophora IJs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
January 2025
Tick-Pathogen Transmission Unit, Laboratory of Bacteriology, Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Hamilton, MT, USA. Electronic address:
Ticks obtain a blood meal by lacerating small blood vessels and ingesting the blood that flows to the feeding site, which triggers various host responses. However, ticks face the challenge of wound healing, a process involving hemostasis, inflammation, cell proliferation and migration, and remodeling, hindering blood acquisition. To overcome these obstacles, tick salivary glands produce an array of bioactive molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Case Rep
June 2024
Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, AIIMS, Patna, India.
Steroid-induced acute pancreatitis is a rare form of pancreatitis that requires intensive care and has a high morbidity and mortality rate as there is no specific treatment. Management of steroid-induced pancreatitis is generally non-specific and supportive. Here, we are presenting a man in his 40s presented with epigastric pain, fever and vomiting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
March 2024
Division of Mucosal Immunology, IMSUT Distinguished Professor Unit, The Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
We previously established the selection-marker-free rice-based oral cholera vaccine (MucoRice-CTB) line 51A for human use by -mediated co-transformation and conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phase I trial in Japan and the United States. Although MucoRice-CTB 51A was acceptably safe and well tolerated by healthy Japanese and U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Parasitol
November 2023
College of Animal Sciences, Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Preventive Veterinary Medicine, Institute of Preventive Veterinary Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China; Melbourne Veterinary School, Faculty of Science, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australi
Protease inhibitors are major components of excretory/secretory products released by parasitic nematodes and have been proposed to play roles in host-parasite interactions. Haemonchus contortus (the barber's pole worm) encodes for several serine protease inhibitors, and in a previous study we identified a trypsin inhibitor-like serine protease inhibitor of this blood-feeding nematode, SPI-I8, as necessary for anticoagulation. Here, we demonstrated that a bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor/Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitor (BPTI/Kunitz) domain-containing protein highly expressed in parasitic stages, HCON_00133150, is involved in suppressing proinflammatory cytokine production in mammalian cells.
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