AI Article Synopsis

  • Schistosomiasis is a significant disease in developing countries, and while many antigens have been identified, there’s a lack of understanding about which are most recognized by the immune system during natural infections.
  • Researchers identified key schistosome membrane proteins that elicited robust antibody responses in infected mice, rats, and humans, pinpointing five specific proteins: SmTsp2, Sm23, Sm29, SmLy6B, and SmLy6F.
  • The study highlights that despite strong immune responses to these antigens, the schistosome parasites seem unaffected, indicating a need to reconsider our understanding of host immune responses for better vaccine development against schistosomiasis.

Article Abstract

Schistosomiasis is a major disease of the developing world for which no vaccine has been successfully commercialized. While numerous Schistosoma mansoni worm antigens have been identified that elicit antibody responses during natural infections, little is known as to the identities of the schistosome antigens that are most prominently recognized by antibodies generated through natural infection. Non-reducing western blots probed with serum from schistosome-infected mice, rats and humans on total extracts of larval or adult schistosomes revealed that a small number of antigen bands predominate in all cases. Recognition of each of these major bands was lost when the blots were run under reducing condition. We expressed a rationally selected group of schistosome tegumental membrane antigens in insect host cells, and used the membrane extracts of these cells to unambiguously identify the major antigens recognized by S. mansoni infected mouse, rat and human serum. These results revealed that a limited number of dominant, reduction-sensitive conformational epitopes on five major tegumental surface membrane proteins: SmTsp2, Sm23, Sm29, SmLy6B and SmLy6F, are primary targets of mouse, rat and human S. mansoni infection sera antibodies. We conclude that, Schistosoma mansoni infection of both permissive (mouse) and non-permissive (rat) rodent models, as well as humans, elicit a dominant antibody response recognizing a limited number of conformational epitopes on the same five tegumental membrane proteins. Thus it appears that neither infecting schistosomula nor mature adult schistosomes are substantively impacted by the robust circulating anti-tegumental antibody response they elicit to these antigens. Importantly, our data suggest a need to re-evaluate host immune responses to many schistosome antigens and has important implications regarding schistosome immune evasion mechanisms and schistosomiasis vaccine development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5271416PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005306DOI Listing

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