4.5 Article

A blood meal-induced Ixodes scapularis tick saliva serpin inhibits trypsin and thrombin, and interferes with platelet aggregation and blood clotting

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PARASITOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages 369-379

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2014.01.010

Keywords

Ixodes scapularis; Tick-feeding physiology; Serine protease inhibitors; Tick anti-blood clotting function; Tick anti-platelet aggregation function

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), USA [AI093858, AI074789, AI074789-01A1S1]
  2. NIH [AI074789-01A1S1]
  3. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico, Brazilian government [201690/2010-1]

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Ixodes scapularis is a medically important tick species that transmits causative agents of important human tick-borne diseases including borreliosis, anaplasmosis and babesiosis. An understanding of how this tick feeds is needed prior to the development of novel methods to protect the human population against tick-borne disease infections. This study characterizes a blood meal-induced L scapularis (Ixsc) tick saliva serine protease inhibitor (serpin (S)), in-house referred to as IxscS-1E1. The hypothesis that ticks use serpins to evade the host's defense response to tick feeding is based on the assumption that tick serpins inhibit functions of protease mediators of the host's anti-tick defense response. Thus, it is significant that consistent with hallmark characteristics of inhibitory serpins, Pichia pastoris-expressed recombinant IxscS-1E1 (rIxscS-1E1) can trap thrombin and trypsin in SDS- and heat-stable complexes, and reduce the activity of the two proteases in a dose-responsive manner. Additionally, rIxscS-1E1 also inhibited, but did not apparently form detectable complexes with, cathepsin G and factor Xa. Our data also show that rIxscS-1E1 may not inhibit chymotrypsin, kallikrein, chymase, plasmin, elastase and papain even at a much higher rIxscS-1E1 concentration. Native IxscS-1E1 potentially plays a role(s) in facilitating I. scapularis tick evasion of the host's hemostatic defense as revealed by the ability of rIxscS-1E1 to inhibit adenosine diphosphate- and thrombin-activated platelet aggregation, and delay activated partial prothrombin time and thrombin time plasma clotting in a dose-responsive manner. We conclude that native IxscS-1E1 is part of the tick saliva protein complex that mediates its anti-hemostatic, and potentially inflammatory, functions by inhibiting the actions of thrombin, typsin and other yet unknown trypsin-like proteases at the tick-host interface. (C) 2014 Australian Society for Parasitology Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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