Da'dara Akram A, Bhardwaj Rita, Skelly Patrick J
Molecular Helminthology Laboratory, Department of Infectious Disease and Global Health, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University, North Grafton, MA, USA.
Purinergic Signal. 2014 Dec;10(4):573-80. doi: 10.1007/s11302-014-9416-5. Epub 2014 Jun 4.
Schistosomes are parasitic worms that can live in the bloodstream of their vertebrate hosts for many years. It has been proposed that the worms impinge on host purinergic signalling by degrading proinflammatory molecules like ATP as well as prothrombotic mediators like ADP. This capability may help explain the apparent refractoriness of the worms to both immune elimination and thrombus formation. Three distinct ectoenzymes, expressed at the host-exposed surface of the worm's tegument, are proposed to be involved in the catabolism of ATP and ADP. These are alkaline phosphatase (SmAP), phosphodiesterase (SmNPP-5), and ATP diphosphohydrolase (SmATPDase1). It has recently been shown that only one of these enzymes-SmATPDase1-actually degrades exogenous ATP and ADP. However, a second ATP diphosphohydrolase homolog (SmATPDase2) is located in the tegument and has been reported to be released by the worms. It is possible that this enzyme too participates in the cleavage of exogenous nucleotide tri- and di-phosphates. To test this hypothesis, we employed RNA interference (RNAi) to suppress the expression of the schistosome SmATPDase1 and SmATPDase2 genes. We find that only SmATPDase1-suppressed parasites are significantly impaired in their ability to degrade exogenously added ATP or ADP. Suppression of SmATPDase2 does not appreciably affect the worms' ability to catabolize ATP or ADP. Furthermore, we detect no evidence for the secretion or release of an ATP-hydrolyzing activity by cultured parasites. The results confirm the role of tegumental SmATPDase1, but not SmADTPDase2, in the degradation of the exogenous proinflammatory and prothrombotic nucleotides ATP and ADP by live intravascular stages of the parasite.
血吸虫是一种寄生蠕虫,可在其脊椎动物宿主的血液中存活多年。有人提出,这些蠕虫通过降解促炎分子如ATP以及促血栓形成介质如ADP来影响宿主的嘌呤能信号传导。这种能力可能有助于解释蠕虫对免疫清除和血栓形成的明显抗性。三种不同的外切酶,表达于蠕虫体表暴露于宿主的表面,被认为参与ATP和ADP的分解代谢。它们是碱性磷酸酶(SmAP)、磷酸二酯酶(SmNPP - 5)和ATP二磷酸水解酶(SmATPDase1)。最近的研究表明,这些酶中只有一种——SmATPDase1——实际上能降解外源性ATP和ADP。然而,第二个ATP二磷酸水解酶同源物(SmATPDase2)位于体表,据报道可由蠕虫释放。这种酶也有可能参与外源性核苷酸三磷酸和二磷酸的裂解。为了验证这一假设,我们采用RNA干扰(RNAi)来抑制血吸虫SmATPDase1和SmATPDase2基因的表达。我们发现,只有SmATPDase1被抑制的寄生虫在外源添加ATP或ADP的降解能力上受到显著损害。抑制SmATPDase2对蠕虫分解代谢ATP或ADP的能力没有明显影响。此外,我们没有检测到培养的寄生虫分泌或释放ATP水解活性的证据。这些结果证实了体表SmATPDase1而非SmADTPDase2在寄生虫血管内活体阶段对外源性促炎和促血栓形成核苷酸ATP和ADP的降解中的作用。