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Infection and Immunity, March 2006, p. 1989-1993, Vol. 74, No. 3
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.74.3.1989-1993.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departamento de Análises Clínicas, Toxicológicas e Bromatológicas, Faculdade de Ciências Farmacêuticas de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil,2 Division of Infection Biology, Department of Infectious Diseases and Immunology,1 Department of Biomolecular Mass Spectrometry, Bijvoet Center for Biomolecular Research and Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands,3 Moredun Research Institute, International Research Centre, Pentlands Science Park, Penicuik, United Kingdom4
Received 12 October 2005/ Returned for modification 22 November 2005/ Accepted 18 December 2005
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Cysteine proteases are the most active proteases of the excretory-secretory products (ES) of H. contortus (12) and are likely to be involved in induction of protective immunity (2). Proteomic analysis of 102 prominent spots present on a two-dimensional (2-D) protein gel of ES identified only members of three other protease classes (28). Therefore, the ability of CBLs to separate and migrate into 2-D protein gels was investigated by gel activity assay (zymogram), as commonly performed after 1-D electrophoresis in gelatin containing sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels. ES (200 µg) was submitted to isoelectric focusing on 13-cm immobilized pH gradient strips (pH 3 to 10 nonlinear [NL]) as described previously (28), but alkylation by iodoacetamide was omitted. Separation in the second dimension was performed on a SDS-12.5% polyacrylamide gel containing 0.1% gelatin in the absence of dithiothreitol (DTT). Under conditions favoring cysteine protease activity (18 h at 37°C in 10 mM Tris, 20 mM NaCl, 10 mM DTT, pH 5.0), abundant proteolytic activity was found in a region between 30 and 35 kDa (Fig. 1) corresponding to the position of cysteine proteases in 1-D zymograms of H. contortus ES (8). No proteolytic activity was detected at the higher molecular weight (MW) range, where serine proteases, metalloproteases, and aspartic proteases are expected to be located (28), possibly due to unfavorable experimental conditions.
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FIG. 1. Two-dimensional zymography (13-cm strips; pH 3 to 10 NL). Proteolysis is visualized as a clear area where gelatin has been digested against a blue background stained with Coomassie blue R250. Molecular masses were estimated from a standard molecular mass marker.
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TABLE 1. Cathepsin B-like cysteine protease spots identified from H. contortus ESa
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FIG.2. (A) Silver-stained two-dimensional SDS-PAGE gel of H. contortus ES (13-cm strips; pH 3 to 10 NL). (B) Detection and localization of ES cysteine proteases of H. contortus by the biotinylated peptide inhibitor Bt-FA-FMK. C) Zoom of the region in panels A (gel on the left) and B (membrane on the right) marked with a square. Specificity is exemplified by two circled spots showing no binding of inhibitor (right) despite intense silver staining (left). The estimation of the molecular mass of stained proteins was done using a biotinylated marker (GE Healthcare).
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FIG. 3. Alignment of the CBL sequences enclosing the identifications of CBLs made from ES of H. contortus. GenBank accession numbers of the displayed sequences have been indicated in Table 1. Positions having four or more identical residues have been shaded. The peptide sequences obtained from each spot by LC/MS/MS (as described in reference 28) are boxed in the alignment. The hemoglobinase motif and S2 substrate binding site described in the text are shown, and the propeptide region is indicated by a black bar.
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A full-length protein sequence was obtained for HMCP7 by conceptual translation from the EST clusters. Sequence comparison (Fig. 3) reveals 71% amino acid identity to HMCP4. Remarkably, HMCP7 carries a glutamic acid at position 338, whereas most H. contortus CBLs have a hydrophobic residue at this position. Amino acids at the homologous position, lining the S2 substrate pocket (depicted in Fig. 3), in cathepsin B-like proteases of other organisms determine substrate specificity. Site-specific mutagenesis (3, 16) has demonstrated that a glutamic acid residue at this position supports the typical cathepsin B-like activity of hydrolyzing substrates Phe-Arg-AMC (FR) and Arg-Arg-AMC (RR), whereas a hydrophobic residue results in cathepsin L-like specificity leading to hydrolysis of only FR. Thus, the potential presence of abundantly expressed HMCP7 may well explain the previous observation that H. contortus intestinal extracts containing CBL activity seemed hardly more efficient in hydrolysis of FR compared to RR (15). Resolving the substrate specificity of individual CBLs, in ES as well as in intestinal extracts, is clearly important in determination of their function. With the identification and mapping of specific CBLs, predicted specificities can be tested by further fractionation from native extracts or characterization of recombinant proteins.
HMCP8 displays 57% identity to a Trichuris suis cysteine protease (accession no. AAC78691) and is represented by a single EST. Staining intensity of spots 1 and 2 suggests efficient secretion of this protease. A replacement of tyrosine by phenylalanine in the putative hemoglobinase domain (Fig. 3) is likely to modify substrate specificity. This domain is strictly conserved within most CBLs from blood feeding helminths (1), and detection of CBLs with and without this motif in the excretory/secretory products of H. contortus prompts for further testing of the potential functional diversity of the secreted CBLs.
CBLs are translated as preproteins harboring an N-terminal propeptide that blocks access to the active site. Activation results from autocleavage triggered by a drop in pH (25). All peptide sequences obtained by LC/MS/MS are localized after the cleavage site (Fig. 3), with the exception of the peptide mapping to the predicted propeptide (13, 20) region of HCMP9 (spot 8, colocalizing with HCMP1), indicating that it may be secreted as a nonactive protease. HCMP9 is represented by three ESTs and is 55% identical to GCP7. The observed MW and pI of AC 4 (spots 4 and 5) and HMCP7 match better with the values predicted for their precursor proteins still containing the propeptide (Table 1).
In addition to HCMP8, spots 1 and 2 provided simultaneous identifications with the aspartic protease PEP2 (CAE12199; spots 1 and 2) and the metalloprotease MEP3 (AAC31568; spot 2). Both are components of a galactose-containing glycoprotein complex (H-gal-GP) with immunoprotective properties located on the luminal surface of the intestine (22-24). PEP2 is cleaved into N- and C-terminal domains that are held together by disulfide bonds which are broken under the reducing conditions used for gel electrophoresis in the second dimension (28). The estimated molecular masses of spots 1 and 2 (32.4 and 32.5 kDa, respectively) correspond to the 31-kDa size reported for the C-terminal domain (22). Similarly, MEP3 (with a predicted size of 95.5 kDa) was shown to resolve in N- and C-terminal domains of 41 and 47 kDa under reducing conditions (24), and the size observed for MEP3 in spot 2 (32.5 kDa) indicates further processing. Previous proteomic analysis of H. contortus ES identified the presence of the N- and C-terminal domains obtained after cleavage of other metalloproteases (MEP1, MEP1B, and MEP2) and serine proteases (28). As for PEP2 and MEP3, the fragments may be kept together by disulfide bonds, possibly giving rise to proteolytically active complexes under native conditions. Colocalization with HCMP8 is considered to be coincidental, and labeling with Bt-FA-FMK is probably exclusively due to binding of this substrate to HCMP8.
Several CBLs induce protective immune responses (14), but a function has not been identified. A proposed (27) and partially reconstituted proteolytic cascade for the metabolism of hemoglobin, the major food source of blood-feeding parasites, encompasses the sequential cleavage by aspartic proteases, cysteine proteases, metalloproteases, and exopeptidases (26). Aspartic and metalloproteases are also involved in the activation of procathepsin B to cathepsin B (5). Immunohistology has demonstrated localization of many proteases at the surface of the microvilli (26). Their presence in ES suggests that hemoglobin digestion may take place not only at the cell surface but also in the lumen of the gut, thus greatly enhancing the rate of digestion. Proteases in ES may perform other essential functions, outside of the worm, in penetration of mucus layers, gaining access to blood vessels and intervention with host processes like blood-clotting and immune responses. The molecular identification of proteases in ES provides specific tools to explore these options.
The protective properties against infection induced by immunization with ES of H. contortus have inspired attempts to determine the molecular components involved (17, 18). A global analysis (28) of the most abundant proteins in ES already identified several known vaccine candidates (H11 and GA1) and demonstrated the complexity and variability of other immunologically relevant molecules (Hc-ASP1, Hc-ASP2, and Hc15). The identification in ES of new CBLs and proteases with previously demonstrated protective properties further expands this group of proteins, thus contributing to the challenging search for the minimal set of proteins required for induction of a protective immune response.
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