AI Article Synopsis

  • Muscle larvae excretory-secretory products (ES L1) have been shown to influence immune responses, particularly in dendritic cells, and may help manage autoimmune diseases by promoting tolerogenic DCs that support immune balance.
  • This research focused on isolating and characterizing proteins from ES L1 that demonstrate galectin-1-like properties, specifically the ability to recognize lactose, and identified a protein (TsGal-1-like) that can induce regulatory T cell responses.
  • Despite identifying nineteen proteins, none matched known galectin family members; however, the isolated proteins showed galectin-1-like traits, indicating the potential for further research into their structure and immune regulatory roles.

Article Abstract

The immunomodulatory potential of muscle larvae excretory-secretory products (ES L1) has been well documented on dendritic cells (DCs) and in animal models of autoimmune diseases. ES L1 products possess the potential to induce tolerogenic DCs and consequently trigger regulatory mechanisms that maintain immune homeostasis. The use of ES L1 as a potential treatment for various inflammatory disorders proved to be beneficial in animal models, although the precise immunomodulatory factors have not yet been identified. This study aimed at the isolation and characterization of ES L1 components that possess galectin family member properties. Galectin-1-like proteins (TsGal-1-like) were isolated from ES L1 based on the assumption of the existence of a lactose-specific carbohydrate-recognition domain and were recognized by anti-galectin-1 antibodies in Western blot. This TsGal-1-like isolate, similar to galectin-1, induced DCs with tolerogenic properties and hence, the capacity to polarize T cell response towards a regulatory type. This was reflected by a significantly increased percentage of CD4CD25Foxp3 regulatory T cells and significantly increased expression of IL-10 and TGF-β within this cell population. Proteomic analysis of TsGal-1-like isolate by mass spectrometry identified nineteen proteins, seven with annotated function after blast analysis against a database for and the UniProt database. To our surprise, none of the identified proteins possesses homology with known galectin family members. Nevertheless, the isolated components of ES L1 possess certain galectin-1 properties, such as specific lactose binding and the potential to elicit a regulatory immune response, so it would be worth further investigating the structure of sugar binding within isolated proteins and its biological significance.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9360477PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.17179/excli2022-4954DOI Listing

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