Researchers solve puzzles surrounding parasite immunity and development

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ANI |
Updated:
Jan 21, 2023 22:16 IST

Maryland [US], January 21 (ANI): The first inter-species signalling route between an arthropod parasite and host, where substances in the blood of a host animal drive the immunity and development of a parasite, has been discovered by research led by a team from the University of Maryland.
In order to stop the spread of illnesses like Lyme disease, the study, which was released in the journal Science, suggests a potential target for anti-tick vaccinations or medicines. When a tick bearing the bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi bites a human, the disease is typically contracted.
The study showed that when ticks feed on the blood of mice infected with the bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi, which causes Lyme disease, a protein from the mouse immune system binds to receptors on tick cell surfaces and signals organs to develop more rapidly, producing an immune response long before the bacteria itself can begin to infect the tick.
The findings also provide important new insights into the evolution of biomolecular interdependencies between species, and highlight, for the first time, both the integration of immunity and animal development and the adaptability of an ancient cell signalling system or pathway that all plant and animal cells use for sensing and responding to their environment.
“This adaptive flexibility of a conserved cell signalling pathway was surprising,” said Utpal Pal, senior author of the study and a professor at the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at College Park.
“It is remarkable that this pathway that is present in everything from sponges to humans is so flexible, it can adapt to accept a ligand [a binding molecule] from another distant species. This tool that everybody has is being used in a way that we didn’t imagine,” Pal said.
The finding suggests that other cell signalling pathways may have been adapted for novel uses in other organisms and points to a new area in immunology and molecular biology ripe for future exploration.
Pal and his colleagues made their discovery while investigating tick immunity, which is a poorly understood area of tick biology.
In their initial study, seeking to understand how the tick immune systems recognize the Borrelia bacteria, the researchers fed ticks a blood meal from either a Borrelia-infected mouse or an uninfected mouse.

Comparing the two groups, they found that the infected blood meal activated a protein in ticks that normally produces energy inside cells. The protein is associated with a simple signalling pathway called JAK/STAT, which is present in all multicellular organisms.
As in all cellular signalling pathways, a specific molecule senses something in the environment and then binds to a receptor on the outside of a cell wall. This sets off a cascade of reactions inside the cell that turns a specific gene on or off and produces a response to whatever outside stimuli were sensed, researchers said.
Assuming that JAK/STAT was triggered by the Borrelia in the infected mouse blood, the researchers isolated the bacteria and injected it directly into ticks to see what molecules were binding with the JAK/STAT receptor.
Surprisingly, the bacteria did not activate JAK/STAT. To find out what did, the researchers removed the Borrelia bacteria from the blood of infected mice and fed the “clean” blood to ticks. The JAK/STAT pathway kicked into action, they said.
The researchers discovered that a protein in tick digestive systems was serving as the JAK/STAT receptor and that it had evolved to bind with the cytokine protein interferon, which is produced by the immune systems of mammals infected with a bacteria like Borrelia.
The researchers also found that the JAK/STAT receptor and pathway are important for normal tick development, even if the pathway is not activated by an infected blood meal. When Pal and his colleagues knocked down the expressed gene that produces the receptor for JAK/STAT, the ticks grew deformed legs, mouthparts, and digestive systems, and were unable to feed and complete the developmental cycle to grow further.
These results suggest that in ticks, the JAK/STAT signalling pathway, and the protein receptor have evolved to integrate immunity with development. Bacteria will compete with ticks for nutrients in the blood of an infected host, so when a tick gets the signal that a blood meal is infected, growing rapidly is a way to use up those nutrients before the bacteria gets them. Laboratory experiments concur that ticks fed on Borrelia-infected mouse blood developed much quicker than those that fed on uninfected mouse blood.
“Understanding that this pathway integrates immunity and development has important implications for potential strategies to prevent tick-borne disease transmission,” Pal said.
“Because if you delete the pathway, ticks with malformed mouthparts cannot feed or transmit disease. But what is also really exciting to me is that we see this sort of early-warning system, where the tick’s immune system indirectly detects a pathogen using an immune response from its host rather than the pathogen itself, accelerating its own development,” he added. (ANI)





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