National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Cathepsin L from the hard tick Ixodes ricinus
Talacko, Pavel ; Konvalinka, Jan (advisor) ; Entlicher, Gustav (referee)
Ticks are globally important parasites involved in transmission of a wide variety of infectious agents. The most common tick species found in Europe is the hard tick Ixodes ricinus, which transmits bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi (a causative agent of Lyme disease) or tick-borne encephalitis virus. Cathepsin proteases are important in the process of digestion of blood proteins in the tick gut. This work is focused on cathepsin L, an important digestive cysteine protease of ticks. Recombinant I. ricinus cathepsin L was expressed in Pichia pastoris and separated from the culture medium by chromatographic purification. N-terminal protein sequencing and labeling by activity-based probe Green-DCG-04 were used for characterization of purified cathepsin L. Substrate and inhibitor specificity were analyzed using peptide substrates and inhibitors. This analysis showed that Z-FR-AMC is a suitable substrate with pH optimum 3.5, and that Z-FF-DMK is an efficient inhibitor. It was demonstrated that cathepsin L cleaves protein substrates in strongly acidic environment (pH 3.5-4.5). Cathepsin L-like proteolytic activity was demonstrated in salivary gland extract and in saliva of the I. ricinus tick. The presence of a cathepsin protease in tick saliva is reported here for the first time. This finding suggests that...
Cathepsin L from the hard tick Ixodes ricinus
Talacko, Pavel ; Entlicher, Gustav (referee) ; Konvalinka, Jan (advisor)
Ticks are globally important parasites involved in transmission of a wide variety of infectious agents. The most common tick species found in Europe is the hard tick Ixodes ricinus, which transmits bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi (a causative agent of Lyme disease) or tick-borne encephalitis virus. Cathepsin proteases are important in the process of digestion of blood proteins in the tick gut. This work is focused on cathepsin L, an important digestive cysteine protease of ticks. Recombinant I. ricinus cathepsin L was expressed in Pichia pastoris and separated from the culture medium by chromatographic purification. N-terminal protein sequencing and labeling by activity-based probe Green-DCG-04 were used for characterization of purified cathepsin L. Substrate and inhibitor specificity were analyzed using peptide substrates and inhibitors. This analysis showed that Z-FR-AMC is a suitable substrate with pH optimum 3.5, and that Z-FF-DMK is an efficient inhibitor. It was demonstrated that cathepsin L cleaves protein substrates in strongly acidic environment (pH 3.5-4.5). Cathepsin L-like proteolytic activity was demonstrated in salivary gland extract and in saliva of the I. ricinus tick. The presence of a cathepsin protease in tick saliva is reported here for the first time. This finding suggests that...
Scavenger receptor - trypsine-like protease IrSRP1 from the tick \kur{Ixodes ricinus}
SINGEROVÁ, Barbora
Scavenger receptors are a large family of structurally diverse molecules that have been implicated in a range of biological functions. In this work, a newly identified multi-domain scavenger receptor-serine protease IrSRP-1 from the tick Ixodes ricinus is characterized. IrSRP-1 is related to the serine protease Sp22D from the mosquito Anopheles gambiae. IrSRP-1 is expressed mainly in the tick gut but also in hemocytes, Malpighian tubules, tracheas and ovaries of fully fed females. This was confirmed with Western blots and immunohistological labeling with antibodies raised against recombinantly expressed IrSRP-1 trypsine-like domain. According to acquired qRT-PCR profiles relative expression of IrSRP-1 is strongly up-regulated during female feeding and remains unchanged in ticks experimentally injected with various microbes. Functional characterization by RNA interference revealed that lowering IrSRP1 expression leads to a higher mortality rate during tick female feeding.

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