Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de São Paulo São Paulo, Brazil.
Front Immunol. 2013 Jan 9;3:419. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2012.00419. eCollection 2012.
Parasite infections are largely dependent on interactions between pathogen and different host cell populations to guarantee a successful infectious process. This is particularly true for obligatory intracellular parasites as Plasmodium, Toxoplasma, and Leishmania, to name a few. Adhesion to and entry into the cell are essential steps requiring specific parasite and host cell molecules. The large amount of possible involved molecules poses additional difficulties for their identification by the classical biochemical approaches. In this respect, the search for alternative techniques should be pursued. Among them two powerful methodologies can be employed, both relying upon the construction of highly diverse combinatorial libraries of peptides or oligonucleotides that randomly bind with high affinity to targets on the cell surface and are selectively displaced by putative ligands. These are, respectively, the peptide-based phage display and the oligonucleotide-based aptamer techniques. The phage display technique has been extensively employed for the identification of novel ligands in vitro and in vivo in different areas such as cancer, vaccine development, and epitope mapping. Particularly, phage display has been employed in the investigation of pathogen-host interactions. Although this methodology has been used for some parasites with encouraging results, in trypanosomatids its use is, as yet, scanty. RNA and DNA aptamers, developed by the SELEX process (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment), were described over two decades ago and since then contributed to a large number of structured nucleic acids for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes or for the understanding of the cell biology. Similarly to the phage display technique scarce use of the SELEX process has been used in the probing of parasite-host interaction. In this review, an overall survey on the use of both phage display and aptamer technologies in different pathogenic organisms will be discussed. Using these techniques, recent results on the interaction of Trypanosoma cruzi with the host will be highlighted focusing on members of the 85 kDa protein family, a subset of the gp85/TS superfamily.
寄生虫感染在很大程度上依赖于病原体与不同宿主细胞群体之间的相互作用,以保证成功的感染过程。对于像疟原虫、刚地弓形虫和利什曼原虫等必需的细胞内寄生虫来说尤其如此。黏附和进入细胞是必不可少的步骤,需要特定的寄生虫和宿主细胞分子。大量可能涉及的分子给它们通过经典生化方法的鉴定带来了额外的困难。在这方面,应该寻求替代技术。其中两种强大的方法可以被采用,它们都依赖于构建高度多样化的肽或寡核苷酸组合文库,这些文库随机以高亲和力结合到细胞表面的靶标上,并被假定的配体选择性取代。这些分别是基于肽的噬菌体展示和基于寡核苷酸的适配体技术。噬菌体展示技术已被广泛用于在不同领域(如癌症、疫苗开发和表位作图)中体外和体内鉴定新型配体。特别地,噬菌体展示已被用于研究病原体-宿主相互作用。尽管这种方法已被用于一些寄生虫的研究,并取得了令人鼓舞的结果,但在原生动物中,它的应用仍然很少。RNA 和 DNA 适配体是通过 SELEX 过程(指数富集的配体系统进化)开发的,它们在二十多年前就被描述过,此后为诊断或治疗目的或为了理解细胞生物学而开发了大量的结构核酸。与噬菌体展示技术类似,SELEX 过程在探测寄生虫-宿主相互作用方面的应用也很少。在这篇综述中,将对噬菌体展示和适配体技术在不同病原生物体中的应用进行全面调查。使用这些技术,将重点介绍 85 kDa 蛋白家族成员(gp85/TS 超家族的一个子集)在克氏锥虫与宿主相互作用中的最新研究结果。