Hart Charles E, Ribeiro Jose M, Kazimirova Maria, Thangamani Saravanan
SUNY Center for Environmental Health and Medicine, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, United States.
Institute for Global Health and Translational Science, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, United States.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2020 Feb 18;10:41. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.00041. eCollection 2020.
Ticks are hematophagous arthropods that transmit a number of pathogens while feeding. Among these is tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV), a flavivirus transmitted by ticks in the temperate zone of Europe. The infection results in febrile illness progressing to encephalitis and meningitis with a possibility of fatality or long-term neurological sequelae. The composition of tick saliva plays an essential role in the initial virus transmission during tick feeding. Ticks secrete a diverse range of salivary proteins to modulate the host response, such as lipocalins to control the itch and inflammatory response, and both proteases and protease inhibitors to prevent blood coagulation. Here, the effect of viral infection of adult females of was studied with the goal of determining how the virus alters the tick sialome to modulate host tissue response at the site of infection. Uninfected ticks or those infected with TBEV were fed on mice and removed and dissected one- and 3-h post-attachment. RNA from the salivary glands of these ticks, as well as from unfed ticks, was extracted and subjected to next-generation sequencing to determine the expression of key secreted proteins at each timepoint. Genes showing statistically significant up- or down-regulation between infected and control ticks were selected and compared to published literature to ascertain their function. From this, the effect of tick viral infection on the modulation of the tick-host interface was determined. Infected ticks were found to differentially express a number of uncategorized genes, proteases, Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors, cytotoxins, and lipocalins at different timepoints. These virus-induced changes to the tick sialome may play a significant role in facilitating virus transmission during the early stages of tick feeding.
蜱是吸血节肢动物,在进食时会传播多种病原体。其中包括蜱传脑炎病毒(TBEV),这是一种在欧洲温带地区由蜱传播的黄病毒。感染会导致发热性疾病发展为脑炎和脑膜炎,有可能导致死亡或长期神经后遗症。蜱唾液的成分在蜱进食期间的初始病毒传播中起着至关重要的作用。蜱分泌多种唾液蛋白来调节宿主反应,例如通过脂质运载蛋白来控制瘙痒和炎症反应,以及通过蛋白酶和蛋白酶抑制剂来防止血液凝固。在此,研究了成年雌性蜱的病毒感染效应,目的是确定病毒如何改变蜱的唾液蛋白质组以调节感染部位的宿主组织反应。将未感染的蜱或感染TBEV的蜱喂给小鼠,在附着后1小时和3小时将其移除并解剖。提取这些蜱以及未进食蜱的唾液腺中的RNA,并进行下一代测序,以确定每个时间点关键分泌蛋白的表达情况。选择在感染蜱和对照蜱之间显示出统计学上显著上调或下调的基因,并与已发表的文献进行比较以确定其功能。由此确定了蜱病毒感染对蜱-宿主界面调节的影响。发现感染的蜱在不同时间点差异表达许多未分类的基因、蛋白酶、库尼茨型丝氨酸蛋白酶抑制剂、细胞毒素和脂质运载蛋白。这些病毒诱导的蜱唾液蛋白质组变化可能在蜱进食早期促进病毒传播中发挥重要作用。