is a common tapeworm in horses causing colic and even mortalities. Current diagnostic tests to detect infections have their limitations and an improved method is needed. Immunoreactive excretory/secretory proteins (E/S proteome) of this parasite can provide promising candidates for diagnostic tests. We compared E/S proteins produced by small (length < 20 mm, width < 5 mm) and large (length 20 to 40 mm, width 5 to 10 mm) worms by label-free quantitative proteomics using a database composed of related and proteins for protein identifications. Altogether, 509 E/S proteins were identified after incubating the worms for three and eight hours. The greatest E/S proteome changes suggested both worm size- and time-dependent changes in cytoskeleton remodeling, apoptosis, and production of antigens/immunogens. The E/S proteins collected at the three-hour time point represented the natural conditions better than those collected at the eight-hour time point, and thereby contained the most relevant diagnostic targets. Immunoblotting using antibodies from horses tested positive/negative for indicated strongest antigenicity/immunogenicity with 13-, 30- and 100-kDa proteins, involving a thioredoxin, heat-shock chaperone 90 (Hsp90), dynein light chain component (DYNLL), tubulin-specific chaperone A (TBCA) and signaling pathway modulators (14-3-3 and Sj-Ts4). This is among the first studies identifying new diagnostic targets and antigens eliciting a IgG-response in horses.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9709427 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1045468 | DOI Listing |
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