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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

A filarial cysteine protease inhibitor down-regulates T cell proliferation and enhances interleukin-10 production.

Filarial nematodes are a cause of chronic debilitating diseases in the tropics. A hallmark of filariasis is the marked down-regulation and polarization of host immune responses, yet molecular constituents of parasites causing this state have remained undefined. We describe a 17-kDa antigen (Av17) of the rodent filarial parasite Acanthocheilonema viteae, which shows amino acid homologies to cystatin C, a major cysteine protease inhibitor belonging to family 2 of the cystatin superfamily. Av17 is released by filariae in vitro. Exported molecules of A. viteae worms are shown to markedly suppress mitogen-induced T cell proliferation of mice and jirds. Av17 accounts for 45.5% of this suppressive activity in the murine system. Recombinant Av17 (rAv17), expressed in Escherichia coli, exhibits biological activity as a cysteine protease inhibitor and was used to examine the immunomodulatory effects, rAv17 induces down-regulation of murine T cell responses to mitogens, to T cell receptor cross-linking by anti-CD3 antibodies and to specific antigens, and at the same time up-regulation of interleukin-10. Hence, this filarial cystatin is a likely effector molecule of immunomodulation and a potential target for antifilarial intervention.[1]

References

  1. A filarial cysteine protease inhibitor down-regulates T cell proliferation and enhances interleukin-10 production. Hartmann, S., Kyewski, B., Sonnenburg, B., Lucius, R. Eur. J. Immunol. (1997) [Pubmed]
 
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