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Original Article

Trichomonas vaginalis α-Actinin 2 Modulates Host Immune Responses by Inducing Tolerogenic Dendritic Cells via IL-10 Production from Regulatory T Cells
Hye-Yeon Lee, Juri Kim, Jae-Sook Ryu, Soon-Jung Park
Korean J Parasitol 2017;55(4):375-384.
Published online August 31, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2017.55.4.375
Trichomonas vaginalis is a pathogen that triggers severe immune responses in hosts. T. vaginalis α-actinin 2, Tvα-actinin 2, has been used to diagnose trichomoniasis. This study was undertaken to examine the role of Tvα-actinin 2 as an antigenic molecule to induce immune responses from humans. Western blot analysis using anti-Tvα-actinin 2 antibodies indicated its presence in the secreted proteins of T. vaginalis. ELISA was employed to measure cytokine production by vaginal epithelial cells, prostate cells, mouse dendritic cells (DCs), or T cells stimulated with T. vaginalis or Tvα-actinin 2 protein. Both T. vaginalis and rTvα-actinin 2 induced cytokine production from epithelial cell lines, including IL-10. Moreover, CD4+CD25- regulatory T cells (Treg cells) incubated with rTvα-actinin 2-treated DCs produced high levels of IL-10. These data indicate that Tvα-actinin 2 modulates immune responses via IL-10 production by Treg cells.

Citations

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  • Identification and Characterization of α-Actinin 1 of Histomonas meleagridis and Its Potential Vaccine Candidates against Histomonosis
    Dandan Liu, Chen Chen, Qiaoguang Chen, Shuang Wang, Zaifan Li, Jie Rong, Yuming Zhang, Zhaofeng Hou, Jianping Tao, Jinjun Xu
    Animals.2023; 13(14): 2330.     CrossRef
  • Surface‐enhanced Raman scattering of secretory proteins for the cytotoxicity analysis of low‐dose doxorubicin
    Mengmeng Zheng, Siqi Gao, Yamin Lin, Yating Lin, Zufang Huang, Shusen Xie, Yun Yu, Juqiang Lin
    Journal of Raman Spectroscopy.2020; 51(11): 2217.     CrossRef
  • Vasoactive intestinal peptide is required in the maintenance of immune regulatory competency of immune regulatory monocytes
    L Guan, D Yu, G-H Wu, H-J Ning, S-D He, S-S Li, T-Y Hu, G Yang, Z-Q Liu, H-Q Yu, X-Z Sun, Z-G Liu, P-C Yang
    Clinical and Experimental Immunology.2019; 196(2): 276.     CrossRef
  • 8,945 View
  • 175 Download
  • 4 Web of Science
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Brief Communication

Metacercarial proteins interacting with WD40-repeat protein of Clonorchis sinensis
Pyo Yun Cho, Tae Im Kim, Shunyu Li, Sung-Jong Hong, Min-Ho Choi, Sung-Tae Hong, Yong Je Chung
Korean J Parasitol 2007;45(3):229-232.
Published online September 20, 2007
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2007.45.3.229

The WD40-repeat proteins serve as a platform coordinating partner proteins and are involved in a range of regulatory cellular functions. A WD40-repeat protein (CsWD1) of Clonorchis sinensis previously cloned is expressed stage-specifically in the tegumental syncytium of C. sinensis metacercariae. In the present study, interacting proteins with the CsWD1 protein was purified by immunoprecipitation and 2 dimension gel electrophoresis from the C. sinensis metacercaria soluble extract, and tryptic peptides were analyzed by LC/ESI-MS. Putative partner proteins were annotated to be actin-2, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and hypothetical and unmanned proteins. The CsWD1 protein was predicted to contain 3 conserved actin-interacting residues on its functional surface. With these results, the CsWD1 protein is suggested to be an actin-interacting protein of C. sinensis.

Citations

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  • Clonorchis sinensis and clonorchiasis, an update
    Sung-Tae Hong, Yueyi Fang
    Parasitology International.2012; 61(1): 17.     CrossRef
  • 7,120 View
  • 67 Download
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Original Articles
Molecular and biochemical characterization of a novel actin bundling protein in Acanthamoeba
Joanna It-itan Alafag, Eun-Kyung Moon, Yeon-Chul Hong, Dong-Il Chung, Hyun-Hee Kong
Korean J Parasitol 2006;44(4):331-341.
Published online December 20, 2006
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2006.44.4.331

Actin binding proteins play key roles in cell structure and movement particularly as regulators of the assembly, stability and localization of actin filaments in the cytoplasm. In the present study, a cDNA clone encoding an actin bundling protein named as AhABP was isolated from Acanthamoeba healyi, a causative agent of granulomatous amebic encephalitis. This clone exhibited high similarity with genes of Physarum polycephalum and Dictyostelium discoideum, which encode actin bundling proteins. Domain search analysis revealed the presence of essential conserved regions, i.e., an active actin binding site and 2 putative calcium binding EF-hands. Transfected amoeba cells demonstrated that AhABP is primarily localized in phagocytic cups, peripheral edges, pseudopods, and in cortical cytoplasm where actins are most abundant. Moreover, AhABP after the deletion of essential regions formed ellipsoidal inclusions within transfected cells. High-speed co-sedimentation assays revealed that AhABP directly interacted with actin in the presence of up to 10 ?M of calcium. Under the electron microscope, thick parallel bundles were formed by full length AhABP, in contrast to the thin actin bundles formed by constructs with deletion sites. In the light of these results, we conclude that AhABP is a novel actin bundling protein that is importantly associated with actin filaments in the cytoplasm.

Citations

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  • GILT in tumor cells improves T cell-mediated anti-tumor immune surveillance
    Hongshuai Li, Yuan Wang, Mengchu Ma, Lihong Hu, Xinxin Zhang, Lingbiao Xin, Wei Zhang, Xiaoming Sun, Yuanyuan Ren, Xinting Wang, Jie Yang
    Immunology Letters.2021; 234: 1.     CrossRef
  • Acanthamoeba castellanii cysts: new ultrastructural findings
    Bibiana Chávez-Munguía, Lizbeth Salazar-Villatoro, Anel Lagunes-Guillén, Maritza Omaña-Molina, Martha Espinosa-Cantellano, Adolfo Martínez-Palomo
    Parasitology Research.2013; 112(3): 1125.     CrossRef
  • In Vitro Efficacies of Clinically Available Drugs against Growth and Viability of an Acanthamoeba castellanii Keratitis Isolate Belonging to the T4 Genotype
    Abdul Mannan Baig, Junaid Iqbal, Naveed Ahmed Khan
    Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.2013; 57(8): 3561.     CrossRef
  • 9,732 View
  • 57 Download
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Localization of cytoskeletal proteins in Pneumocystis carinii by immuno-electron microscopy
Jae-Ran Yu, Jae-Kyong Pyon, Min Seo, Byung-Suk Jung, Sang Rock Cho, Soon-Hyung Lee, Sung-Tae Hong
Korean J Parasitol 2001;39(1):13-21.
Published online March 31, 2001
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2001.39.1.13

Pneumocystis carinii causes serious pulmonary infection in immunosuppressed patients. This study was undertaken to observe the cytoskeletal proteins of P. carinii by immuno-electron microscopy. P. carinii infection was experimentally induced by immunosuppression of Sprague-Dawley rats for seven weeks, and their lungs were used for the observations of this study. The gold particles localized actin, tropomyosin, and tubulin. The actin was irregularly scattered in the cytoplasm of the trophic forms but was much more concentrated in the inner space of the cell wall of the cystic forms called the inner electron-lucent layer. No significant amount of tropomyosin was observed in either trophic forms or cystic forms. The tubulin was distributed along the peripheral cytoplasm and filopodia of both the trophic and cystic forms rather than in the inner side of the cytoplasm. Particularly, in the cystic forms, the amount of tubulin was increased and located mainly in the inner electron-lucent layer of the cell wall where the actin was concentrated as well. The results of this study showed that the cell wall of P. carinii cystic forms is a structure whose inner side is rich in actin and tubulin. The location of the actin and tubulin in P. carinii suggests that the main role of these proteins is an involvement in the protection of cystic forms from the outside environment by maintaining rigidity of the cystic forms.

Citations

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  • A Molecular Window into the Biology and Epidemiology of Pneumocystis spp
    Liang Ma, Ousmane H. Cissé, Joseph A. Kovacs
    Clinical Microbiology Reviews.2018;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • 8,395 View
  • 78 Download
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Distribution of actin and tropomyosin in Cryptosporidium muris
Jae-Ran Yu
Korean J Parasitol 1998;36(4):227-234.
Published online December 20, 1998
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.1998.36.4.227

Actin and tropomyosin of Cryptosporidium muris were localized by immunogold labeling. Two kinds of antibodies for actin labeling were used. The polyclonal antibody to skeletal muscle (chicken back muscle) actin was labeled on the pellicle and cytoplasmic vacuoles of parasites. The feeder organelle has showed a small amount of polyclonal actin antibody labeling as well. Whereas the monoclonal antibody to smooth muscle (chicken gizzard muscle) actin was chiefly labeled on the filamentous cytoplasm of parasites. The apical portion of host gastric epithelial cell cytoplasm was also labeled by smooth muscle actin together. The polyclonal antibody to tropomyosin was much more labeled at C. muris than host cells, so it could be easily identified even with low magnification (×2,000). The tropomyosin was observed along the pellicle, cytoplasmic vacuoles, and around the nucleus also. The skeletal muscle type actin seems to play a role in various cellular functions with tropomyosin in C. muris; on the other hand, the smooth muscle type actin was located mainly on the filamentous cytoplasm and supported the parasites' firm attachment to host cells. Tropomyosin on the pellicle was thought to be able to stimulate the host as a major antigen through continuous shedding out by the escape of sporozoites or merozoites from their mother cells.

Citations

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  • Mdm20 Modulates Actin Remodeling through the mTORC2 Pathway via Its Effect on Rictor Expression
    Kunihiko Yasuda, Mayumi Takahashi, Nozomu Mori, Linda Bendall
    PLOS ONE.2015; 10(11): e0142943.     CrossRef
  • Labeling surface epitopes to identify Cryptosporidium life stages using a scanning electron microscopy-based immunogold approach
    Hanna Edwards, R.C. Andrew Thompson, Wan H. Koh, Peta L. Clode
    Molecular and Cellular Probes.2012; 26(1): 21.     CrossRef
  • Accumulation of tropomyosin isoform 5 at the infection sites of host cells during Cryptosporidium invasion
    Steven P. O’Hara, Jim Jung-Ching Lin
    Parasitology Research.2006; 99(1): 45.     CrossRef
  • A novel Cryptosporidium parvum antigen, CP2, preferentially associates with membranous structures
    Steven P. O’Hara, Jae-Ran Yu, Jim Jung-Ching Lin
    Parasitology Research.2004; 92(4): 317.     CrossRef
  • The effect of microfilament inhibitor on the Cryptosporidium infection in vitro
    Jae-Ran Yu, Sung-Don Choi
    The Korean Journal of Parasitology.2000; 38(4): 257.     CrossRef
  • 7,979 View
  • 64 Download
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Actin and some actin binding proteins such as tropomyosin, -actinin and troponin T were localized by simultaneous double immunogold labeling in several developmental stages of Cryptosporidium parvum. All of the observed developmental stages have many particles of tropomyosin and actin around pellicle and cytoplasm. Tropomyosin was labeled much more than the actin when these two proteins were labeled simultaneously. And alpha-actinin was labeled mostly in the pellicle, but troponin T labeling was very rarely observed. From this study, it was suggested that tropomyosin seems to be one of the major proteins of C. parvum, so it must be playing important roles in C. parvum.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Labeling surface epitopes to identify Cryptosporidium life stages using a scanning electron microscopy-based immunogold approach
    Hanna Edwards, R.C. Andrew Thompson, Wan H. Koh, Peta L. Clode
    Molecular and Cellular Probes.2012; 26(1): 21.     CrossRef
  • Distribution of actin and tropomyosin in Cryptosporidium muris
    J R Yu
    The Korean Journal of Parasitology.1998; 36(4): 227.     CrossRef
  • 4,822 View
  • 41 Download
  • Crossref