4.4 Article

Tick CAPA propeptide cDNAs and receptor activity of endogenous tick pyrokinins and analogs: Towards discovering pyrokinin function in ticks

Journal

PEPTIDES
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.peptides.2021.170665

Keywords

Acari; Hard tick; Cattle fever tick; PK/PBAN/DH; Synthetic peptide; Tick neuropeptide

Funding

  1. NIFA-AFRI Animal Health and Well-Being Award [2016-67015-24918]
  2. Texas A&M AgriLife Research Insect Vector Diseases Grant Program [FY19-21, FY 22-23]
  3. PVP program through the Hatch project TX [TEX0-2-9206, 1002279, Y2018-2023]

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The study cloned tick cDNAs of the capability gene from the southern cattle tick and blacklegged tick, revealing that the encoded PKs act as agonists on the tick receptor, and designed PK analogs also showed potential for prolonged impact.
Pyrokinins (PKs) are pleiotropic neuropeptides with significant roles in invertebrate physiology. Although functions of PKs are known in insects, there is a lack of knowledge of PK-encoding genes and PKs functions in ticks. Herein the first tick cDNAs of the capability (capa) gene were cloned from the southern cattle tick, Rhipicephalus microplus (Acari: Ixodidae), and the blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis. Each cDNA encoded one periviscerokinin and five different pyrokinins. Two PKs were identical in sequence in the two species. The three PKs unique to R. microplus (Rhimi-CAPA-PK1, -PK2, and -PK5) were tested on the recombinant R. microplus pyrokinin receptor using a calcium bioluminescence assay. The Rhimi-CAPA-PKs acted as agonists with EC50s ranging from 101-188 nM. Twenty PK analogs designed for enhanced bioavailability and biostability were tested on the receptor. Five of these were designed based on the sequences of the three unique Rhimi-CAPA-PKs. Eight PK analogs were also agonists; four of them were full agonists that exhibited comparable efficacy to the native Rhimi-CAPA-PKs, with EC50 ranging from 401 nM-1.9 mu M. The structure-activity relationships (SAR) of all analogs were analyzed. Our results suggested that a positively charged, basic lysine at the variable position X of the PK active core (FXPRLamide) conferred enhanced affinity to the analogs in their interaction with the tick receptor. These analogs are promising tools to elucidate the pyrokinin function in ticks in vivo as these analogs are expected to have prolonged hemolymph residence time in comparison to the native peptides.

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