4.7 Article

Probing of a Human Proteome Microarray With a Recombinant Pathogen Protein Reveals a Novel Mechanism by Which Hookworms Suppress B-Cell Receptor Signaling

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 211, Issue 3, Pages 416-425

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiu451

Keywords

hookworm; Necator americanus; Na-ASP-2; SCP/TAPS; CD79A; B cell; antigen receptor; protein microarray; host-pathogen interaction

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [100100092]
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [1037304, 613718, 1052936, 1020114, 1023636]
  3. Victoria Life Sciences Computation Initiative (VLSCI) [VR0007]
  4. Peak Computing Facility at the University of Melbourne, an initiative of the Victorian Government
  5. Australian Postgraduate Award from James Cook University

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Na-ASP-2 is an efficacious hookworm vaccine antigen. However, despite elucidation of its crystal structure and studies addressing its immunobiology, the function of Na-ASP-2 has remained elusive. We probed a 9000-protein human proteome microarray with Na-ASP-2 and showed binding to CD79A, a component of the B-cell antigen receptor complex. Na-ASP-2 bound to human B lymphocytes ex vivo and downregulated the transcription of approximately 1000 B-cell messenger RNAs (mRNAs), while only approximately 100 mRNAs were upregulated, compared with control-treated cells. The expression of a range of molecules was affected by Na-ASP-2, including factors involved in leukocyte transendothelial migration pathways and the B-cell signaling receptor pathway. Of note was the downregulated transcription of lyn and pi3k, molecules that are known to interact with CD79A and control B-cell receptor signaling processes. Together, these results highlight a previously unknown interaction between a hookworm-secreted protein and B cells, which has implications for helminth-driven immunomodulation and vaccine development. Further, the novel use of human protein microarrays to identify host-pathogen interactions, coupled with ex vivo binding studies and subsequent analyses of global gene expression in human host cells, demonstrates a new pipeline by which to explore the molecular basis of infectious diseases.

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