Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T12:10:19.936Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Helminth parasite proteomics: from experimental models to human infections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2012

FRANCISCA MUTAPI*
Affiliation:
Centre for Immunity Infection and Evolution, Institute of Immunology & Infection Research, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Laboratories, King's Buildings, West Mains Rd, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK
*
*Corresponding Author: Dr Francisca Mutapi, Institute of Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Laboratories, King's Buildings, West Mains Rd, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT. Tel: +44 131 650 8662. Fax: +44 131 650 5450. E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Schistosomiasis is a major human helminth infection endemic in developing countries. Urogenital schistosomiasis, caused by S. haematobium, is the most prevalent human schistosome disease in sub-Saharan Africa. Currently control of schistosome infection is by treatment of infected people with the anthelmintic drug praziquantel, but there are calls for continued efforts to develop a vaccine against the parasites. In order for successful vaccine development, it is necessary to understand the biology and molecular characteristics of the parasite. Ultimately, there is need to understand the nature and dynamics of the relationship between the parasite and the natural host. Thus, my studies have focused on molecular characterization of different parasite stages and integrating this information with quantitative approaches to investigate the nature and development of protective immunity against schistosomes in humans. Proteomics has proved a powerful tool in these studies allowing the proteins expressed by the parasite to be characterized at a molecular and immunological level. In this review, the application of proteomic approaches to understanding the human-schistosome relationship as well as testing specific hypotheses on the nature and development of schistosome-specific immune responses is discussed. The contribution of these approaches to informing schistosome vaccine development is highlighted.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012. The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/>. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.

INTRODUCTION

Schistosomiasis is a neglected tropical disease (NTD) affecting between 200–400 million people globally (Bethony et al. Reference Bethony, Cole, Guo, Kamhawi, Lightowlers, Loukas, Petri, Reed, Valenzuela and Hotez2011). The recent first World Health Organisation (WHO) report on NTDs cites that 90% of the world's schistosomiasis cases now occur in sub-Saharan Africa (WHO, 2011). Schistosoma haematobium is the most prevalent human schistosome species in Africa and causes urogenital schistosomiasis whose clinical symptoms include haematuria, dysuria, hydronephrosis and calcification of the bladder. Urogenital schistosomiasis is also associated with bladder cancer (Parkin, Reference Parkin2008) and an increased risk of HIV infection (Kjetland et al. Reference Kjetland, Ndhlovu, Gomo, Mduluza, Midzi, Gwanzura, Mason, Sandvik, Friis and Gundersen2006). Control is primarily by treatment with the antihelminthic drug praziquantel which is cheap (approximately US$ 0·50/dose), efficacious (cure rates >90%) and safe; it is used in mass drug administration programmes aimed primarily at school children. Despite all these attributes of praziquantel, the WHO report on NTDs notes that the goal of reaching 75% of school age children by the end of 2010 advocated for by the World Health Assembly (WHA) Resolution 54·19 and adopted by the WHA in 2001 was not realised with less than 10% treatment coverage having been achieved by 2008 (WHO, 2011). One of the problems associated with helminth control is the need for repeated treatment due to rapid re-infection, thus vaccination has been suggested as an additional tool for integrated helminth control.

Successful vaccine development requires an understanding of the immunological interaction (both protective and pathological) between the host and the parasite in addition to understanding the nature and development of protective acquired immune responses stimulated by the parasite. Methodologies and technologies for characterizing immune responses to parasites have become more sophisticated with the advent of both parasite genome sequence (Berriman et al. Reference Berriman, Haas, LoVerde, Wilson, Dillon, Cerqueira, Mashiyama, Al-Lazikani, Andrade, Ashton, Aslett, Bartholomeu, Blandin, Caffrey, Coghlan, Coulson, Day, Delcher, DeMarco, Djikeng, Eyre, Gamble, Ghedin, Gu, Hertz-Fowler, Hirai, Hirai, Houston, Ivens, Johnston, Lacerda, Macedo, McVeigh, Ning, Oliveira, Overington, Parkhill, Pertea, Pierce, Protasio, Quail, Rajandream, Rogers, Sajid, Salzberg, Stanke, Tivey, White, Williams, Wortman, Wu, Zamanian, Zerlotini, Fraser-Liggett, Barrell and El-Sayed2009; Zhou et al. 2009) data and high throughput platforms such as microarrays. Despite these technological and scientific advances, vaccine development for human helminth parasites has yet to produce a single licensed vaccine product compared to advances in animal helminth vaccines (Lightowlers et al. Reference Lightowlers, Colebrook, Gauci, Gauci, Kyngdon, Monkhouse, Vallejo Rodriquez, Read, Rolfe and Sato2003). In this current climate of vast amounts of sequence data and rapid technological developments, the challenge is to identify and pose the ‘right’ biological questions and use those tools at our disposal to answer them. One of the main obstacles to this process is that many fundamental questions on the nature and dynamics of protective immune responses in human helminths remain unanswered. Questions such as (1) which parasite stage stimulates a protective immune response? (2) Against which parasite stage are protective responses directed? (3) How do naturally acquired protective responses differ from vaccine-induced protective immune responses? For example, natural anti-IgE responses against the hookworm antigen Ancylostoma secreted protein (ASP-2) are protective against hookworm infection but vaccine-induced responses trigger pathological responses whose clinical outcome is urticaria (Bethony et al. Reference Bethony, Cole, Guo, Kamhawi, Lightowlers, Loukas, Petri, Reed, Valenzuela and Hotez2011). (4) Why do single antigen recombinant vaccines provide a large percentage of protection in some helminth species (e.g. the EG95 recombinant vaccine in Echinococcus granulosus is 100% protective in sheep) and only very weak protection in others (the 26 kDa GST recombinant Schistosoma japonicum recombinant vaccine elicited 24% protection in mice) (Liu et al. Reference Liu, Song, Xu, Yang and McManus1995). In addition to these questions, the applicability of vaccine-induced protective immunity generated in animal models to humans remains to be evaluated. Differences in the history of infection occurring in human and naturally infected animals which are not reproduced in experimental studies may affect the development and type of protective immunity in heterogeneous human populations (Wherry et al. Reference Wherry, Teichgraber, Becker, Masopust, Kaech, Antia, von Andrian and Ahmed2003).

My own studies are concentrated on molecular characterization of schistosome parasites and integrating these studies with quantitative approaches to investigate the nature and development of protective immunity against schistosomes in humans. In this review, I focus on the application of proteomic approaches that we have used to characterize schistosome parasites as well as to test specific hypotheses on the development of naturally acquired and anthelmintic drug altered schistosome-specific immune responses in human populations.

CHARACTERIZATION OF SCHISTOSOME PARASITES THROUGH COMPARATIVE PROTEOMICS

There are similarities in immune responses stimulated by different helminth species in humans (Allen and Maizels, Reference Allen and Maizels2011) which have contributed to several shared epidemiological patterns in human populations exposed to different helminth species such as aggregation of infection, convex age-infection curves, peak shifts and pre-disposition to heavy infection (Anderson and May, Reference Anderson and May1992; Woolhouse, Reference Woolhouse1998). However, different helminth groups differ in their life histories and interaction with their hosts highlighting fundamental differences and phenotypic plasticity within host-helminth interactions (see review by Bourke et al. Reference Bourke, Maizels and Mutapi2011). Thus, molecular comparisons between different helminth species should highlight differences between parasites that may be related to specific interactions with their hosts. While genomic and transcriptomic differences are informative for evolutionary studies as well as giving indications on the level of genetic differences, they do not take into account post-transcriptional regulation of protein expression and cannot determine the degree of epitope cross-reactivity between parasite species (Lopez, Reference Lopez2007). Therefore, proteomic comparisons can give a better indication of phenotypic differences between different parasites. In our studies, we have compared the proteome of adult Schistosoma haematobium to that of the animal schistosome S. bovis, an important parasite of cattle, sheep and goats. These two schistosome species have different mammalian definitive hosts and occupy different niches within the vasculature of these hosts, and they utilise the same intermediate host (Rollinson et al. Reference Rollinson, Kaukas, Johnston, Simpson and Tanaka1997). Furthermore, hybridisation has been reported between the two species demonstrating their close phylogenetic relationship (Huyse et al. Reference Huyse, Webster, Geldof, Stothard, Diaw, Polman and Rollinson2009). Sequences of small and large nuclear subunit ribosomal RNA genes and partial mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase 1 sequences indicate a close similarity between S. haematobium and S. bovis (Bowles et al. Reference Bowles, Hope, Tiu, Liu and McManus1993; Webster et al. Reference Webster, Southgate, Timothy and Littlewood2006). Similarities between S. haematobium and S. bovis also translate to some level of antigenic similarity leading to a greater degree of heterologous immunity than that observed between S. haematobium and the other major human schistosomes, S. mansoni and S. japonicum (Grogan et al. Reference Grogan, Rotmans, Ghoneim, Deelder, Yazdanbakhsh and Klinkert1997). Therefore, comparing these closely related schistosome species would give an indication of any differences that may be due to specific host-parasite interactions. The current lack of genome sequence data for S. haematobium and S. bovis means some proteins present in the proteome cannot be identified if they lack homologues in the sequenced S. mansoni (Berriman et al. Reference Berriman, Haas, LoVerde, Wilson, Dillon, Cerqueira, Mashiyama, Al-Lazikani, Andrade, Ashton, Aslett, Bartholomeu, Blandin, Caffrey, Coghlan, Coulson, Day, Delcher, DeMarco, Djikeng, Eyre, Gamble, Ghedin, Gu, Hertz-Fowler, Hirai, Hirai, Houston, Ivens, Johnston, Lacerda, Macedo, McVeigh, Ning, Oliveira, Overington, Parkhill, Pertea, Pierce, Protasio, Quail, Rajandream, Rogers, Sajid, Salzberg, Stanke, Tivey, White, Williams, Wortman, Wu, Zamanian, Zerlotini, Fraser-Liggett, Barrell and El-Sayed2009) or S. japonicum genomes (Zhou et al. Reference Zhou, Zheng, Chen, Zhang, Wang, Guo, Huang and Zhang2009). In my laboratory, we conducted proteomic comparisons using the Difference Gel Electrophoresis (DiGE) (Alban et al. Reference Alban, David, Bjorkesten, Andersson, Sloge, Lewis and Currie2003). The approach is summarized in Fig. 1. Indeed, this comparison showed some interesting differences, mostly related to proteins involved in response to stress (e.g. changes in pH, attack by reactive oxygen metabolites and depletion of essential nutrients) (Kaufmann, Reference Kaufmann1990a, Reference Kaufmannb), Heat Shock Protein (HSP) 70 despite 91% similarity between the two species as shown in Fig. 2A (adapted from Cook et al. Reference Cook, Aynsley, Turner, Jenkins, Van Rooijen, Leeto, Brombacher and Mountford2011; Higon et al. 2011). The biological implications of the difference in HSP70 expression (at least 5-fold difference) has yet to be determined. HSP70 is expressed in cercariae and adult-stage schistosomes. Generally HSP70 expression is induced early during infection in parasitic organisms and plays a critical role during adaptation to the new environment (Maresca and Kobayashi, Reference Maresca and Kobayashi1994). In most organisms as well as in parasites, several genes coding for HSP70 exist, but only some are stress-inducible. In schistosomes, expression of HSP70 in adults can be induced by increasing temperature and stress (Maresca and Kobayashi, Reference Maresca and Kobayashi1994). Therefore, the differences in HSP70 between the two schistosome species may be related to differences in host-related stresses. This would be consistent with results from previous inter-species comparisons in Fasciola trematodes where F. hepatica and F. gigantica show different levels of HSP70 expression (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Spithill, Pike, Meeusen and Piedrafita2008). Furthermore, host-related differences in HSP70 expression occur in Echinostoma species with parasites from less permissive hosts expressing different levels from parasites in hosts with which they are more compatible (Higon et al. Reference Higon, Monteagudo, Fried, Esteban, Toledo and Marcilla2008).

Fig. 1. A summary of the difference gel electrophoresis (DiGE) used to compare abundance of proteins between difference proteomes. The proteins from each proteome are labelled with fluorescent dyes (for example Cy3, Cy5, Cy2) prior to two-dimensional electrophoresis. After the gel electrophoresis, the gel is scanned with the excitation wavelength of each dye one after the other. Quantitative analysis is then conducted through differential in gel analysis (DIA) with image analysis software such as DeCyder from GE Healthcare.

Fig. 2. Differential in gel analysis (DIA) images for the comparison between schistosomes and the echinostsome parasites showing the different abundances of different proteins and the corresponding histogram comparing the abundance of each protein spot on the gel as well as the overall % similarity in the proteomes.

A) Comparing S. haematobium with S. bovis. Green spots=higher expression in S. haematobium; Red spots=higher expression in S. bovis; Blue spots=expression levels similar in both species.B) Comparing E. caproni with S. haematobium. Green spots=higher expression in S. haematobium; Red spots=higher expression in E. caproni; Blue spots=expression levels similar in both species.

C) Comparing E. caproni with S. bovis. Green spots=higher expression in E. caproni; Red spots=higher expression in S. bovis; Blue spots=expression levels similar in both species. Fig. adapted from Higon et al. 2011.

To further determine differences associated with different life histories, we compared the adult worm proteomes of the two schistosome species to that of another trematode, the experimental model parasite Echinostoma caproni which does not have a tissue phase in the mammalian host and resides in the gastrointestinal tract (Fig. 2B). Despite the fact that echinostomes belong to a different genus, they show protective immunological cross-reactivity with parasites of the genus Schistosoma (Sirag et al. Reference Sirag, Christensen, Frandsen, Monrad and Nansen1980). Unsurprisingly, there are differences in the expression levels of of both HSP70 and HSP60 whose expression was increased at least 5 fold in S. haematobium compared to that in E. caproni. Although this proteomic comparison provides an important insight into the molecular features underlying their distinct life histories, demonstrating differences in the E. caproni and S. haematobium proteome alone is not enough to fully understand phenotypic differences in the host-parasite interactions. In this respect, we have commenced looking at differences in immunogenicity and cross-reactivity between the trematodes and have already shown varying degrees of cross-reactivity, with the greatest cross-reactivity unsurprisingly occurring between the two schistosome parasites (Cook et al. Reference Cook, Aynsley, Turner, Jenkins, Van Rooijen, Leeto, Brombacher and Mountford2011). Further studies to characterize abundantly expressed but non-immunogenic proteins are currently underway. Such studies will be useful in informing vaccine development for, (1) cross-species protection (e.g. S. haematobium and S. mansoni exist as co-infections in some areas in Africa), and (2) determining suitable experimental models for vaccine evaluation prior to human clinical trials.

IDENTIFICATION OF IMMUNOGENIC SCHISTOSOME PROTEINS IN HUMAN HOSTS

Parasite vaccine candidate discovery studies have focused on identifying antigens that stimulate protective immune responses during natural infections in target hosts and attempting to reproduce these responses artificially. In order to identify candidate antigens, it is necessary to determine which of the parasite proteins are immunogenic. The approach used in our studies has been to separate the parasite proteins using 2-D electrophoresis, followed by Western blotting with sera from populations naturally exposed to schistosome infections, and thus screen for antigens reactive with these sera (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Foucher, Harcus, Nicoll, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2005). Recognised antigens (spots on the Western blot gel) are then matched to a Coomassie-blue stained 2-D gel of the parasite proteome (preparative gel) and the specific spots excised from the preparative gel, digested and subjected to tandem mass spectrometry to obtain identifications (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Foucher, Harcus, Nicoll, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2005). This approach provides information both on the characteristics of immunogenic parasite antigens as well as the nature of the serological response directed against them during a natural infection in the human host (e.g. antibody isotype-specific reactivities (Mutapi et al., Reference Mutapi, Bourke, Harcus, Midzi, Mduluza, Turner, Burchmore and Maizels2011). A further advantage is that these variations can be related to host characteristics, including age and infection intensity, providing a link between molecular parasitology and epidemiology (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2008). The advantages of this approach over the traditional methods of screening expression libraries with serum samples from infected or vaccinated animals include the ability to detect immunogenic epitopes arising from post-translation modifications. Our studies determining the immunogenic proteins using the combined 2-D Western and proteomics approach have identified more novel schistosome antigens in a single experiment than the collective effort in the field in the preceding 10 years demonstrating the power of the approach, i.e. at least 71 antigens comprising different proteins as well as different isoforms of the same proteins (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Foucher, Harcus, Nicoll, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2005) as shown in Table 1. This study showed that the heat shock proteins were immunogenic, consistent with previous reports from other studies and also from other parasite species (Kaufmann, 1990).

Table 1. Characterization of natural and praziquantel-induced schistosome antigen recognition profiles by Zimbabwean populations exposed to S. haematobium infection. World Health Organization-listed schistosome vaccine candidates are highlighted in bold. Un-shaded cells denote no recognition (1st quartile range), yellow denote low intensity of recognition (2nd interquartile, orange denote medium intensity (3rd quartile) and red denote strong intensity (4th quartile) for both. Changes in total IgG recognition profiles with age and infection level and Ag recognition by different Ab subclasses. For the Ag recognition profile by age and infection intensity the population was divided into 9 groups as follows: group 1–3 are all aged 5–10 years and have zero (Group 1), mild (1–49 eggs/10 ml urine) (Group 2) and heavy (50+eggs/10 ml urine) (Group 3) infection levels, respectively, groups 4–6 are all aged 11–13 years and have 0 (Group 4), mild (Group 5) and heavy (Group 6) infection levels, respectively and finally groups 7–9 are all aged 14–18 years and have 0 (Group 7), mild (Group 8) and heavy (Group 9) infection levels. The middle column (Rx) represents antigens recognised before and after treatment (yellow) and those recognised only after anthelmintic treatment (red). Table adapted from (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2008, Reference Mutapi, Bourke, Harcus, Midzi, Mduluza, Turner, Burchmore and Maizels2011).

However, there is a limitation to the number of antigens that can be identified through the gel-based proteomic approaches. This is due to the differences in sensitivities of the stains on the preparative gels, solubility of parasite proteins and the Western blotting technique. This means that some highly immunogenic proteins seen on the Western blots cannot be visualised on the prep gel and therefore cannot be identified. This may also be occurring in the case of less abundantly expressed proteins. Advances in the protein array approaches in antigen discovery offer some promise in overcoming some of these limitations (Driguez et al. Reference Driguez, Doolan, Loukas, Felgner and McManus2010) though integrating the two methods may give a more comprehensive array of parasite antigens and therefore, be more informative.

CHARACTERIZING THE ANTIBODY SUBCLASSES THAT RECOGNISE IMMUNOGENIC SCHISTOSOME PROTEINS IN HUMAN HOSTS

Different antibody subclasses have different effector functions and several human field studies have focused on characterizing the dynamics of different antibody subclass responses to helminth parasites (for example, Correa-Oliveira et al. Reference Correa-Oliveira, Dusse, Viana, Colley, Santos Carvalho and Gazzinelli1988; Dunne et al. Reference Dunne, Butterworth, Fulford, Ouma and Sturrock1992; Grzych et al. Reference Grzych, Grezel, Xu, Neyrinck, Capron, Ouma, Butterworth and Capron1993; Quinnell et al. Reference Quinnell, Woolhouse, Walsh and Pritchard1995; Wherry et al. Reference Wherry, Teichgraber, Becker, Masopust, Kaech, Antia, von Andrian and Ahmed2003). Therefore, some antibody subclasses, such as IgM, have been described as a marker of exposure to schistosome parasite antigens (Wherry et al. Reference Wherry, Teichgraber, Becker, Masopust, Kaech, Antia, von Andrian and Ahmed2003), IgG4 as a marker of infection status in filarial infections (Kwan-Lim et al. Reference Kwan-Lim, Forsyth and Maizels1990), others such as schistosome and hookworm IgE as a marker of resistance to re-infection (Hagan et al. Reference Hagan, Blumenthal, Dunne, Simpson and Wilkins1991; Hagan, Reference Hagan1992; Hagel et al. Reference Hagel, Lynch, Puccio, Rodriguez, Luzondo, Rodriguez, Sanchez, Cabrera and Di Prisco2003). We earlier demonstrated that the production of some antibody subclasses is inversely correlated; specifically, high IgA producers did not produce high levels of IgG1 and vice versa (Wherry et al. Reference Wherry, Teichgraber, Becker, Masopust, Kaech, Antia, von Andrian and Ahmed2003). Furthermore, only high IgG1 and low IgA producers had little or no infection. An inverse relationship in these two subclasses has also been reported in a case of idiopathic arthritis where patients deficient in IgG1 had high titres of IgA (Yildiz and Kural, Reference Yildiz and Kural2007) suggesting that the expression of these two subclasses is differentially regulated. What was not clear from our immuno-epidemiological studies of the IgA and IgG1 profiles was whether these antibodies were recognizing the same antigens. Thus, the 2-D Western blotting and proteomics approach was used to determine the antigen recognition profile of the main antibody subclasses, IgE, IgG4, IgG1 and IgA implicated in the expression of resistance to schistosome re-infection. The aim of the study was to test the null hypothesis that the four subclasses recognise the same parasite antigens from adult schistosomes. This study showed that although the majority of the parasite antigens were recognised by all four antibody subclasses, there were some antigens whose reactivity was restricted to only one of the subclasses (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Bourke, Harcus, Midzi, Mduluza, Turner, Burchmore and Maizels2011) as shown in Table 1. These differences occurred between different proteins as well as between isoforms of the same protein; for example, the two fructose 1-6-bis-phosphate aldolase isoforms were differentially recognized by IgA and IgG1. In general, IgG1 recognised the largest variety of antigens followed by IgE, IgA and IgG4, respectively. IgE recognized all antigens reactive with IgG4 as well as an additional four antigens, an isoform of 28-kDa GST, phosphoglycerate kinase, actin 1 and calreticulin. IgG1 additionally recognized fatty acid–binding protein, triose-phosphate isomerase and HSP70, which were not recognized by IgA. Knowing the subclasses that recognise antigens is now an important aspect of helminth vaccine development since people already exposed to the parasite in endemic areas will have had some immunological experience with the parasite or its antigens. This could potentially lead to adverse reactions to immunization, if the vaccine enhances certain types of already existing subclass responses. The human hookworm vaccine clinical trials evaluating the ASP-2 vaccine had to be discontinued after Phase I when it was shown that vaccinating people who already had an IgE response to the protein induced urticaria (Bethony et al. Reference Bethony, Cole, Guo, Kamhawi, Lightowlers, Loukas, Petri, Reed, Valenzuela and Hotez2011). Thus, it seems a vaccine inducing/enhancing a parasite-specific IgE response is now less favoured compared to that inducing an IgG1 response, making studies characterizing subclasses which recognise candidate vaccine antigens an essential component of the characterization of natural and vaccine-induced immune responses.

NATURE AND DEVELOPMENT OF PARASITE –SPECIFIC ACQUIRED IMMUNITY: EXPLAINING THE SLOW DEVELOPMENT OF NATURALLY ACQUIRED IMMUNE RESPONSES

Helminth infections are characterized by the slow development of protective acquired immunity (Anderson and May, Reference Anderson and May1992) and various explanations have been proposed for this (Yazdanbakhsh and Sacks, Reference Yazdanbakhsh and Sacks2010). In my laboratory, we have been testing different hypotheses explaining this gradual development of protective acquired immunity including the immuno-suppressive effects of helminths (Maizels and Yazdanbakhsh, Reference Maizels and Yazdanbakhsh2003) and the need for a threshold of parasite antigens (Woolhouse and Hagan, Reference Woolhouse and Hagan1999) using a combination of quantitative 2-D Western blotting and proteomic approaches. The quantitative studies have shown that host immuno-suppression by parasites alone does not reproduce the epidemiological patterns observed in the field (Mitchell et al. Reference Mitchell, Mutapi and Woolhouse2008). The second proposition that we tested was the threshold hypothesis. We proposed that the host immune system is effective against parasites only after exposure to a threshold level of parasite antigens (Woolhouse and Hagan, Reference Woolhouse and Hagan1999). During a natural schistosome infection, in which adult worms can survive for an average 3–7 years (Fulford et al. Reference Fulford, Butterworth, Ouma and Sturrock1995), it may take several years for this threshold to be reached. To test the hypothesis that a host must experience a threshold amount of antigen exposure to mount a protective response, we compared antigen-recognition patterns (the number of antigens recognized and the intensity of antigen recognition assayed via 2-D Western blotting as described above) by Zimbabweans exposed to S. haematobium infection in three age–groups; young children (acquiring infection), older children (in whom infection levels are peaking) and in adults (where infection levels are declining rapidly). Individuals within these age-groups were further partitioned by infection level. The study clearly demonstrated that the repertoire of antigens recognized increased with age, peaking in the oldest participants harbouring little or no infection (Table 1), indicating that this increase in the repertoire of antigens recognized was associated with resistance to infection (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2008). Furthermore, the intensity of antigen recognition increased with age, peaking in the oldest participants with the heaviest infection intensity thus indicating a cumulative effect of parasite antigens on the immune responses mounted. Taken together, these observations demonstrate that the recognition of specific schistosome antigens, both in terms of the diversity of antigens recognized and the intensity of antigen recognition, increased with cumulative exposure to parasite antigens consistent with the need for a threshold of antigen.

DETERMINING HOW NATURALLY ACQUIRED HUMAN ANTI-SCHISTOSOME ANTIBODY RESPONSES ARE AFFECTED BY ANTHELMINTIC TREATMENT

Control of schistosome infections is by treatment of infected people with the anthelmintic drug praziquantel. The drug damages the adult schistosome tegument exposing parasite antigens including 28-kDa glutathione S-transferase, the current leading vaccine candidate antigen for schistosomiasis (McManus and Loukas, Reference McManus and Loukas2008), Sm23, tubercle glycoprotein, alkaline phosphatase and actin on the worm surface to the host immune system (Andrews Reference Andrews1985; Fallon et al. Reference Fallon, Smith, Nicholls, Modha and Doenhoff1994; Dupre et al. Reference Dupre, Herve, Schacht, Capron and Riveau1999) resulting in the killing of the parasites. Thus, if the threshold hypothesis holds, praziquantel treatment offers a straightforward way of testing it as it introduces a large amount of parasite antigens at once. This should accelerate the rate at which infected individuals reach threshold levels of adult schistosome antigens. Using the 2-D Western blotting and proteomics approach we compared antigen recognition profiles of the same population described above before and after curative praziquantel treatment. The results showed that praziquantel treatment induced quantitative and qualitative changes in schistosome antigen recognition patterns within 12 weeks of treatment (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Foucher, Harcus, Nicoll, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2005). These changes were not observed in untreated people. Moreover, the antigens whose recognition was enhanced by treatment were also those antigens recognised naturally in untreated older people carrying little or no infection (so called endemic normals or putatively resistant people) (Mutapi et al. Reference Mutapi, Burchmore, Mduluza, Midzi, Turner and Maizels2008). The fact that anthelmintic treatment can induce potentially protective immune responses presents a plausible additional vaccination approach and, as such, field studies are currently underway evaluating this method of inducing protective immunity to schistosomes (Black et al. Reference Black, Muok, Mwinzi, Carter, Karanja, Secor and Colley2010a, Reference Black, Mwinzi, Muok, Abudho, Fitzsimmons, Dunne, Karanja, Secor and Colleyb). The idea of treatment-induced resistance to reinfection is neither a novel concept nor restricted to schistosome infections. In the veterinary field, a significant proportion of protozoan vaccines against some of the most economically significant parasites of livestock and companion animals are based on drug-abbreviated infections, using the so called infection and treatment (I&T) immunisation strategy (reviewed by Meeusen et al. Reference Meeusen, Walker, Peters, Pastoret and Jungersen2007). Recently, a trial of the I&T protocol was attempted in human volunteers for control of Plasmodium falciparum, the protozoan causing the most severe form of malaria (Roestenberg et al. Reference Roestenberg, McCall, Hopman, Wiersma, Luty, van Gemert, van de Vegte-Bolmer, van Schaijk, Teelen, Arens, Spaarman, de Mast, Roeffen, Snounou, Renia, van der Ven, Hermsen and Sauerwein2009) and was successful in inducing sterile immunity against re-infection. Even if this approach is not eventually adapted as a vaccine strategy for schistosome control, it provides a vaccination model from which general lessons can be learned for the design of successful recombinant vaccines. Mechanistic studies in experimental models on the effect of praziquantel treatment on the development of protective immune responses against schistosome infections are already shedding light on the nature of immune responses protective against re-infection (Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Cheever, White, Thompson and Wynn2011).

CONCLUDING REMARKS

There has been significant progress made in understanding schistosome biology through proteomic approaches. The elegant work characterizing the schistosome infective stages as well as secreted and excreted products from the parasite has expanded our knowledge of the parasite's anatomical structure and physiological processes (Curwen et al. Reference Curwen, Ashton, Johnston and Wilson2004; Mathieson and Wilson, Reference Mathieson and Wilson2010; Mathieson et al. Reference Mathieson, Castro-Borges and Wilson2011). Furthermore, the recent description of micro exon genes in schistosomes and their potential for generating antigen variation represents an exciting development in our current understanding of helminth antigen diversity and how the diversity is generated (DeMarco et al. Reference DeMarco, Mathieson, Manuel, Dillon, Curwen, Ashton, Ivens, Berriman, Verjovski-Almeida and Wilson2010). Nonetheless, there are still more questions to address if we are to improve current understanding of the interaction between helminth parasites and their natural hosts. An understanding of the evolutionary, molecular and mechanistic processes involved in this interaction is essential for the development of additional intervention methods against the parasites. Due to variations arising from phenotypic differences and phenotypic plasticity in parasites (see (Machado-Silva et al. Reference Machado-Silva, Neves, Rodrigues-Silva, Figueiredo de Oliveira and Maldonado2011)) and heterogeneities in human populations, studies characterizing the interaction of the whole organisms (schistosomes and host) should be more informative than reductionist approaches. This review has focused just on a few of the proteomic approaches that we are using to address fundamental questions in schistosome biology and immunology. Extension of these approaches to include assessment of protein activities, modifications and localization and studies of interactions of proteins in complexes (Tyers and Mann, Reference Tyers and Mann2003) will enable the description of systems-level cellular interactions between host and parasite proteins.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This review is based on work conducted with co-operation from the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare in Zimbabwe, the Provincial Medical Director of Mashonaland East, the Environmental Health Workers, and nursing staff at Chitate and Chitowa Clinics and Murehwa Hospital, Mutoko District Hospital, residents, teachers and school children in Mutoko, Rusike, Magaya, Chitate and Chipinda Schools. I thank my collaborators at the University of Glasgow, Richard Burchmore and Mike Turner and collaborators in Zimbabwe, Nicholas Midzi at the National Institute for Health Research and Takafira Mduluza at the University of Zimbabwe. I also thank members of the National Institutes of Health in Zimbabwe and the Biochemistry Department at University of Zimbabwe for technical support. I am grateful for comments on the manuscript received from members of the Parasite Immuno-epidemiology Group at the University of Edinburgh (Claire Bourke, Melissa Higon, Norman Nausch and Nadine Rujeni). Finally, I am grateful to the British Society for parasitology for hosting the meeting on ‘Proteomic Insights into Parasite Biology’ where ideas presented in this manuscript were first presented.

FINANCIAL SUPPORT

This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust (Grant no WT082028MA) and the Thrasher Foundation.

References

REFERENCES

Alban, A., David, S. O., Bjorkesten, L., Andersson, C., Sloge, E., Lewis, S. and Currie, I. (2003). A novel experimental design for comparative two-dimensional gel analysis: two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis incorporating a pooled internal standard. Proteomics 3, 3644.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Allen, J. E. and Maizels, R. M. (2011). Diversity and dialogue in immunity to helminths. Nature Reviews Immunology 11, 375388.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Anderson, R. M. and May, R. M. (1992). Infectious Diseases of Humans: Dynamics and Control. Oxford Science.Google Scholar
Andrews, P. (1985). Praziquantel: mechanisms of anti-schistosomal activity. Pharmacological Therapy 29, 129156.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Berriman, M., Haas, B. J., LoVerde, P. T., Wilson, R. A., Dillon, G. P., Cerqueira, G. C., Mashiyama, S. T., Al-Lazikani, B., Andrade, L. F., Ashton, P. D., Aslett, M. A., Bartholomeu, D. C., Blandin, G., Caffrey, C. R., Coghlan, A., Coulson, R., Day, T. A., Delcher, A., DeMarco, R., Djikeng, A., Eyre, T., Gamble, J. A., Ghedin, E., Gu, Y., Hertz-Fowler, C., Hirai, H., Hirai, Y., Houston, R., Ivens, A., Johnston, D. A., Lacerda, D., Macedo, C. D., McVeigh, P., Ning, Z., Oliveira, G., Overington, J. P., Parkhill, J., Pertea, M., Pierce, R. J., Protasio, A. V., Quail, M. A., Rajandream, M. A., Rogers, J., Sajid, M., Salzberg, S. L., Stanke, M., Tivey, A. R., White, O., Williams, D. L., Wortman, J., Wu, W., Zamanian, M., Zerlotini, A., Fraser-Liggett, C. M., Barrell, B. G. and El-Sayed, N. M. (2009). The genome of the blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni. Nature 460, 352358.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bethony, J. M., Cole, R. N., Guo, X., Kamhawi, S., Lightowlers, M. W., Loukas, A., Petri, W., Reed, S., Valenzuela, J. G. and Hotez, P. J. (2011). Vaccines to combat the neglected tropical diseases. Immunology Reviews 239, 237270.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Black, C. L., Muok, E. M., Mwinzi, P. N., Carter, J. M., Karanja, D. M., Secor, W. E. and Colley, D. G. (2010 a). Increases in levels of schistosome-specific immunoglobulin E and CD23(+) B cells in a cohort of kenyan children undergoing repeated treatment and reinfection with Schistosoma mansoni. Journal of Infectious Diseases 202, 399405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, C. L., Mwinzi, P. N., Muok, E. M., Abudho, B., Fitzsimmons, C. M., Dunne, D. W., Karanja, D. M., Secor, W. E. and Colley, D. G. (2010 b). Influence of exposure history on the immunology and development of resistance to human Schistosomiasis mansoni. PLoS Neglected Tropical Dieases 4, e637.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bourke, C. D., Maizels, R. M. and Mutapi, F. (2011). Acquired immune heterogeneity and its sources in human helminth infection. Parasitology 138, 139159.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bowles, J., Hope, M., Tiu, W. U., Liu, X. and McManus, D. P. (1993). Nuclear and mitochondrial genetic markers highly conserved between Chinese and Philippine Schistosoma japonicum. Acta Tropica 55, 217229.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cook, P. C., Aynsley, S. A., Turner, J. D., Jenkins, G. R., Van Rooijen, N., Leeto, M., Brombacher, F. and Mountford, A. P. (2011). Multiple helminth infection of the skin causes lymphocyte hypo-responsiveness mediated by Th2 conditioning of dermal myeloid cells. PLoS Pathogens 7, e1001323.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Correa-Oliveira, R., Dusse, L. M., Viana, I. R., Colley, D. G., Santos Carvalho, O. and Gazzinelli, G. (1988). Human antibody responses against schistosomal antigens. I. Antibodies from patients with Ancylostoma, Ascaris lumbricoides or Schistosoma mansoni infections react with schistosome antigens. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 38, 348355.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Curwen, R. S., Ashton, P. D., Johnston, D. A. and Wilson, R. A. (2004). The Schistosoma mansoni soluble proteome: a comparison across four life-cycle stages. Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 138, 5766.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
DeMarco, R., Mathieson, W., Manuel, S. J., Dillon, G. P., Curwen, R. S., Ashton, P. D., Ivens, A. C., Berriman, M., Verjovski-Almeida, S. and Wilson, R. A. (2010). Protein variation in blood-dwelling schistosome worms generated by differential splicing of micro-exon gene transcripts. Genome Research 20, 11121121.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Driguez, P., Doolan, D. L., Loukas, A., Felgner, P. L. and McManus, D. P. (2010). Schistosomiasis vaccine discovery using immunomics. Parasites and Vectors 3, 4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dunne, D. W., Butterworth, A. E., Fulford, A. J., Ouma, J. H. and Sturrock, R. F. (1992). Human IgE responses to Schistosoma mansoni and resistance to reinfection. Memorias do Instistuto de Oswaldo Cruz 87 (Suppl. IV), 99103.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dupre, L., Herve, M., Schacht, A. M., Capron, A. and Riveau, G. (1999). Control of schistosomiasis pathology by combination of Sm28GST DNA immunization and praziquantel treatment. Journal of Infectious Diseases 180, 454463.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fallon, P. G., Smith, P., Nicholls, T., Modha, J. and Doenhoff, M. J. (1994). Praziquantel induced exposure of Schistosoma mansoni alkaline phosphatase: drug-antibody synergy which acts preferentially against female worms. Parasite Immunology 16, 529535.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fulford, A. C. J., Butterworth, A. E., Ouma, H. J. and Sturrock, R. F. (1995). A statistical approach to schistosome population dynamics and estimation of the life- span of Schistosoma mansoni in man. Parasitology 110, 307316.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grogan, J., Rotmans, P., Ghoneim, H., Deelder, A., Yazdanbakhsh, M. and Klinkert, M. Q. (1997). Recognition of Schistosoma mansoni cathepsins B and L by human IgG1 and IgG4 antibodies. Parasite Immunology 19, 215220.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grzych, J. M., Grezel, D., Xu, C. B., Neyrinck, J. L., Capron, M., Ouma, J. H., Butterworth, A. E. and Capron, A. (1993). IgA antibodies to a protective antigen in human Schistosomiasis mansoni. Journal of Immunology 150, 527535.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hagan, P. (1992). IgE and protective Immunity. Parasite Immunology 15, 14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagan, P., Blumenthal, U. J., Dunne, D., Simpson, A. J. G. and Wilkins, A. H. (1991). Human IgE, IgG4 and resistance to reinfection with Schistosoma haematobium. Nature 349, 234245.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hagel, I., Lynch, N. R., Puccio, F., Rodriguez, O., Luzondo, R., Rodriguez, P., Sanchez, P., Cabrera, C. M. and Di Prisco, M. C. (2003). Defective regulation of the protective IgE response against intestinal helminth Ascaris lumbricoides in malnourished children. Journal of Tropical Pediatrics 49, 136142.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Higon, M., Monteagudo, C., Fried, B., Esteban, J. G., Toledo, R. and Marcilla, A. (2008). Molecular cloning and characterization of Echinostoma caproni heat shock protein-70 and differential expression in the parasite derived from low- and high-compatible hosts. Parasitology 135, 14691477.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huyse, T., Webster, B. L., Geldof, S., Stothard, J. R., Diaw, O. T., Polman, K. and Rollinson, D. (2009). Bidirectional introgressive hybridization between a cattle and human schistosome species. PLoS Pathogens 5, e1000571.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kaufmann, S. H. (1990 a). Heat-shock proteins: a missing link in the host-parasite relationship? Medical Microbiology and Immunology 179, 6166.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kaufmann, S. H. (1990 b). Heat shock proteins and the immune response. Immunology Today 11, 129136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kjetland, E. F., Ndhlovu, P. D., Gomo, E., Mduluza, T., Midzi, N., Gwanzura, L., Mason, P. R., Sandvik, L., Friis, H. and Gundersen, S. G. (2006). Association between genital schistosomiasis and HIV in rural Zimbabwean women. Aids 20, 593600.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kwan-Lim, G. E., Forsyth, K. P. and Maizels, R. M. (1990). Filarial-specific IgG4 response correlates with active Wuchereria bancrofti infection. Journal of Immunology 145, 42984305.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lightowlers, M. W., Colebrook, A. L., Gauci, C. G., Gauci, S. M., Kyngdon, C. T., Monkhouse, J. L., Vallejo Rodriquez, C., Read, A. J., Rolfe, R. A. and Sato, C. (2003). Vaccination against cestode parasites: anti-helminth vaccines that work and why. Veterinary Parasitology 115, 83123.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, S. X., Song, G. C., Xu, Y. X., Yang, W. and McManus, D. P. (1995). Anti-fecundity immunity induced in pigs vaccinated with recombinant Schistosoma japonicum 26 kDa glutathione-S-transferase. Parasite Immunology 17, 355–340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lopez, J. L. (2007). Two-dimensional electrophoresis in proteome expression analysis. Journal of Chromatography B 849, 190202.Google ScholarPubMed
Machado-Silva, J. R., Neves, H. R., Rodrigues-Silva, R., Figueiredo de Oliveira, R. M. and Maldonado, A. (2011). Assessment of Akodon cursor (Rodentia, Sigmodontinae) as permissive host to Schistosoma mansoni infection: morphology of adult worms. Acta Parasitologica 56, 147153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maizels, R. M. and Yazdanbakhsh, M. (2003). Immune regulation by helminth parasites: cellular and molecular mechanisms. Nature Reviews Immunology 3, 733744.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Maresca, B. and Kobayashi, G. S. (1994). Hsp70 in parasites: as an inducible protective protein and as an antigen. Experientia 50, 10671074.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mathieson, W., Castro-Borges, W. and Wilson, R. A. (2011). The proteasome-ubiquitin pathway in the Schistosoma mansoni egg has development- and morphology-specific characteristics. Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 175, 118125.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mathieson, W. and Wilson, R. A. (2010). A comparative proteomic study of the undeveloped and developed Schistosoma mansoni egg and its contents: the miracidium, hatch fluid and secretions. International Journal for Parasitology 40, 617628.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McManus, D. P. and Loukas, A. (2008). Current status of vaccines for schistosomiasis. Clinical Microbiology Reviews 21, 225242.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Meeusen, E. N., Walker, J., Peters, A., Pastoret, P. P. and Jungersen, G. (2007). Current status of veterinary vaccines. Clinical Microbiology Reviews 20, 489510, table of contents.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, K. M., Mutapi, F. and Woolhouse, M. E. (2008). The predicted impact of immunosuppression upon population age-intensity profiles for schistosomiasis. Parasite Immunology 9, 462470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mutapi, F., Bourke, C., Harcus, Y., Midzi, N., Mduluza, T., Turner, C. M., Burchmore, R. and Maizels, R. M. (2011). Differential recognition patterns of Schistosoma haematobium adult worm antigens by the human antibodies IgA, IgE, IgG1 and IgG4. Parasite Immunology 33, 181192.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mutapi, F., Burchmore, R., Mduluza, T., Foucher, A., Harcus, Y., Nicoll, G., Midzi, N., Turner, C. M. and Maizels, R. M. (2005). Praziquantel treatment of individuals exposed to Schistosoma haematobium enhances serological recognition of defined parasite antigens. Journal of Infectious Diseases 192, 11081118.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mutapi, F., Burchmore, R., Mduluza, T., Midzi, N., Turner, C. M. and Maizels, R. M. (2008). Age-related and infection intensity-related shifts in antibody recognition of defined protein antigens in a schistosome-exposed population. Journal of Infectious Diseases 198, 167175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parkin, D. M. (2008). The global burden of urinary bladder cancer. Scandinavian Journal of Urology and Nephrology Supplement 118, 1220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinnell, R. J., Woolhouse, M. E. J., Walsh, E. A. and Pritchard, D. J. (1995). Immunoepidemiology of human necatorisis: correlations between antibody responses and parasite burdens. Parasite Immunology 17, 313318.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roestenberg, M., McCall, M., Hopman, J., Wiersma, J., Luty, A. J., van Gemert, G. J., van de Vegte-Bolmer, M., van Schaijk, B., Teelen, K., Arens, T., Spaarman, L., de Mast, Q., Roeffen, W., Snounou, G., Renia, L., van der Ven, A., Hermsen, C. C. and Sauerwein, R. (2009). Protection against a malaria challenge by sporozoite inoculation. New England Journal of Medicine 361, 468477.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rollinson, D., Kaukas, A., Johnston, D. A., Simpson, A. J. G. and Tanaka, M. (1997). Some molecular insights into schistosome evolution. International Journal for Parasitology 27, 1128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sirag, S. B., Christensen, N. O., Frandsen, F., Monrad, J. and Nansen, P. (1980). Homologous and heterologous resistance in Echinostoma revolutum infections in mice. Parasitology 80, 479486.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smith, R. E., Spithill, T. W., Pike, R. N., Meeusen, E. N. and Piedrafita, D. (2008). Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica:cloning and characterisation of 70 kDa heat-shock proteins reveals variation in HSP70 gene expression between parasite species recovered from sheep. Experimental Parasitology 118, 536542.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tyers, M. and Mann, M. (2003). From genomics to proteomics. Nature 422, 193197.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Webster, B. L., Southgate, V. R., Timothy, D. and Littlewood, J. (2006). A revision of the interrelationships of Schistosoma including the recently described Schistosoma guineensis. International Journal for Parasitology 36, 947955.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wherry, E. J., Teichgraber, V., Becker, T. C., Masopust, D., Kaech, S. M., Antia, R., von Andrian, U. H. and Ahmed, R. (2003). Lineage relationship and protective immunity of memory CD8 T cell subsets. Nature Immunology 4, 225234.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilson, M. S., Cheever, A. W., White, S. D., Thompson, R. W. and Wynn, T. A. (2011). IL-10 blocks the development of resistance to re-infection with Schistosoma mansoni. PLoS Pathogens 7, e1002171.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Woolhouse, M. E. (1998). Patterns in parasite epidemiology: the peak shift. Parasitology Today 14, 428434.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Woolhouse, M. E. and Hagan, P. (1999). Seeking the ghost of worms past. Nature Medicine 5, 12251227.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Health Organisation (2011). First WHO report on neglected tropical diseases 2010: working to overcome the global impact of neglected tropical diseases. WHO, Geneva.Google Scholar
Yazdanbakhsh, M. and Sacks, D. L. (2010). Why does immunity to parasites take so long to develop? Nature Reviews Immunology 10, 8081.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yildiz, B. and Kural, N. (2007). IgG1 deficiency and high IgA level with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. European Journal of Pediatrics 166, 11791180.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhou, Y., Zheng, Z., Chen, Y., Zhang, L., Wang, K., Guo, J., Huang, Z. and Zhang, B. (2009). The Schistosoma japonicum genome reveals features of host-parasite interplay. Nature 460, 345351.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. A summary of the difference gel electrophoresis (DiGE) used to compare abundance of proteins between difference proteomes. The proteins from each proteome are labelled with fluorescent dyes (for example Cy3, Cy5, Cy2) prior to two-dimensional electrophoresis. After the gel electrophoresis, the gel is scanned with the excitation wavelength of each dye one after the other. Quantitative analysis is then conducted through differential in gel analysis (DIA) with image analysis software such as DeCyder from GE Healthcare.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Differential in gel analysis (DIA) images for the comparison between schistosomes and the echinostsome parasites showing the different abundances of different proteins and the corresponding histogram comparing the abundance of each protein spot on the gel as well as the overall % similarity in the proteomes.A) Comparing S. haematobium with S. bovis. Green spots=higher expression in S. haematobium; Red spots=higher expression in S. bovis; Blue spots=expression levels similar in both species.B) Comparing E. caproni with S. haematobium. Green spots=higher expression in S. haematobium; Red spots=higher expression in E. caproni; Blue spots=expression levels similar in both species.C) Comparing E. caproni with S. bovis. Green spots=higher expression in E. caproni; Red spots=higher expression in S. bovis; Blue spots=expression levels similar in both species. Fig. adapted from Higon et al. 2011.

Figure 2

Table 1. Characterization of natural and praziquantel-induced schistosome antigen recognition profiles by Zimbabwean populations exposed to S. haematobium infection. World Health Organization-listed schistosome vaccine candidates are highlighted in bold. Un-shaded cells denote no recognition (1st quartile range), yellow denote low intensity of recognition (2nd interquartile, orange denote medium intensity (3rd quartile) and red denote strong intensity (4th quartile) for both. Changes in total IgG recognition profiles with age and infection level and Ag recognition by different Ab subclasses. For the Ag recognition profile by age and infection intensity the population was divided into 9 groups as follows: group 1–3 are all aged 5–10 years and have zero (Group 1), mild (1–49 eggs/10 ml urine) (Group 2) and heavy (50+eggs/10 ml urine) (Group 3) infection levels, respectively, groups 4–6 are all aged 11–13 years and have 0 (Group 4), mild (Group 5) and heavy (Group 6) infection levels, respectively and finally groups 7–9 are all aged 14–18 years and have 0 (Group 7), mild (Group 8) and heavy (Group 9) infection levels. The middle column (Rx) represents antigens recognised before and after treatment (yellow) and those recognised only after anthelmintic treatment (red). Table adapted from (Mutapi et al. 2008, 2011).