Article
In-depth characterization of trypsin-like serine peptidases in the midgut of the sugar fed Culex quinquefasciatus
Registro en:
VELOSO, André Borges; et al. In-depth characterization of trypsin-like serine peptidases in the midgut of the sugar fed Culex quinquefasciatus. Parasites & Vectors, v.8:373, 16p, 2015.
1756-3305
10.1186/s13071-015-0985-0
Autor
Veloso, André Borges
Vahia, Leonardo Sabóia
Lopes, Geovane Dias
Domont, Gilberto B.
Britto, Constança
Cuervo, Patricia
Jesus, Jose B. de
Resumen
Background: Culex quinquefasciatus is a hematophagous insect from the Culicidae family that feeds on the blood
of humans, dogs, birds and livestock. This species transmits a wide variety of pathogens between humans and
animals. The midgut environment is the first location of pathogen-vector interactions for blood-feeding mosquitoes
and the expression of specific peptidases in the early stages of feeding could influence the outcome of the infection.
Trypsin-like serine peptidases belong to a multi-gene family that can be expressed in different isoforms under distinct
physiological conditions. However, the confident assignment of the trypsin genes that are expressed under
each condition is still a challenge due to the large number of trypsin-coding genes in the Culicidae family
and most likely because they are low abundance proteins.
Methods: We used zymography for the biochemical characterization of the peptidase profile of the midgut
from C. quinquefasciatus females fed on sugar. Protein samples were also submitted to SDS-PAGE followed
by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) analysis for peptidase identification. The
peptidases sequences were analyzed with bioinformatics tools to assess their distinct features.
Results: Zymography revealed that trypsin-like serine peptidases were responsible for the proteolytic activity
in the midgut of females fed on sugar diet. After denaturation in SDS-PAGE, eight trypsin-like serine peptidases were
identified by LC-MS/MS. These peptidases have structural features typical of invertebrate digestive trypsin peptidases but
exhibited singularities at the protein sequence level such as: the presence of different amino acids at the autocatalytic
motif and substrate binding regions as well as different number of disulfide bounds. Data mining revealed a group of
trypsin-like serine peptidases that are specific to C. quinquefasciatus when compared to the culicids genomes sequenced
so far.
Conclusion: We demonstrated that proteomics approaches combined with bioinformatics tools and zymographic
analysis can lead to the functional annotation of trypsin-like serine peptidases coding genes and aid in the
understanding of the complexity of peptidase expression in mosquitoes.