Abstract

Dogs infected with the cardiopulmonary nematode Angiostrongylus vasorum may suffer from respiratory distress and/or bleeding disorders. Descriptions of clinical signs in foxes are rare, despite high prevalence. To evaluate the impact of infection on coagulation and immune response, serum proteins from eight experimentally infected foxes before and after inoculation (day 0, 35, 84, 154) were subjected to differential proteomic analyses based on quantitative data and compared to available data from dogs. The number of proteins with differential abundance compared to the uninfected baseline increased with chronicity of infection. Bone marrow proteoglycan, chitinase 3-like protein 1 and pulmonary surfactant-associated protein B were among the most prominently increased proteins. The abundance of several proteins involved in coagulation was decreased. Enriched pathways obtained from both increased and decreased proteins included, among others, “platelet degranulation” and “haemostasis”, and indicated both activation and suppression of coagulation. Qualitative comparison to dog data suggests some parallel serum proteomic alterations. The comparison, however, also indicates that foxes have a more adequate immunopathological response to A. vasorum infection compared to dogs, facilitating persistent infections in foxes. Our findings imply that foxes may be more tolerant to A. vasorum infection, as compared to dogs, reflecting a longer evolutionary host–parasite adaptation in foxes, which constitute a key wildlife reservoir.

Highlights

  • Angiostrongylus vasorum is a cardiopulmonary nematode of canids

  • Serum samples from eight A. vasorum experimentally infected foxes were drawn at four different time points (right before inoculation (d0), and during prepatency (d35), patency (d84) and the chronic stage of infection (d154, 5 foxes only)) and analysed by nano liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (LC-MS) to monitor the compositional changes of the blood proteome in response to parasite infection

  • Serum proteins involved in the immune and inflammatory response are strongly increased upon experimental A. vasorum infection in farm foxes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Angiostrongylus vasorum is a cardiopulmonary nematode of canids. Adults reside in the right side of the heart of the definitive hosts, where females release numerous eggs. First-stage larvae (L1) hatch and migrate through the lung where they cause tissue damage and pneumonia. First-stage larvae are eventually coughed up, swallowed, and excreted with the faeces. Slugs and snails act as intermediate hosts, in which L1 develop to infectious third-stage larvae (L3). Canids are infected by the ingestion of L3 contained in gastropod intermediate hosts, which migrate to the heart where they further develop [1]. Angiostrongylus vasorum is endemic in Europe and parts of North and South America [2,3,4].

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call