Fasciola hepaticasurface tegument: glycoproteins at the interface of parasite and host

  • Ravidà, Alessandra
  • Cwiklinski, Krystyna
  • Aldridge, Allison M.
  • Clarke, Paul
  • Thompson, Roisin
  • Gerlach, Jared Q.
  • Kilcoyne, Michelle
  • Hokke, Cornelis H.
  • Dalton, John P.
  • O\u27Neill, Sandra M.
Publication date
September 2018
Publisher
American Society for Biochemistry & Molecular Biology (ASBMB)

Abstract

Fasciola hepatica, commonly known as liver fluke, is a trematode that causes Fasciolosis in ruminants and humans. The outer tegumental coat of F. hepatica (FhTeg) is a complex metabolically active biological matrix that is continually exposed to the host immune system and therefore makes a good vaccine target. F. hepatica tegumental coat is highly glycosylated and helminth-derived immunogenic oligosaccharide motifs and glycoproteins are currently being investigated as novel vaccine candidates. This report presents the first systematic characterization of FhTeg glycosylation using lectin microarrays to characterize carbohydrates motifs present, and lectin histochemistry to localize these on the F. hepatica tegument. We discovered that FhTeg ...

Extracted data

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