Abstract

Schistosoma mansoni causes schistosomiasis, which affects 240 million people, and 700 million people are living at risk of infection. Epigenetic mechanisms are important for transcriptional control and are well-known conserved transcriptional co-regulators in evolution, already described in mammal, yeast, protozoa and S. mansoni, responsible for heterochromatization and gene silence mechanisms through the formation of complexes of transcriptional repression in chromatin. Previous results from another group have shown that HP1 (SmCBX) proteins form chromatin complexes with SmMDB2/3 proteins and regulate stem cells and oviposition in parasite adult worms. In addition, results from other groups have shown that cercariae are transcriptionally silent and epigenetic mechanisms are involved in the regulation of gene expression in this stage. In this work, our aim was to give insights into SmHP1 and proteins involved in transcriptional regulation in the cercariae stage. Using monoclonal anti-HP1 antibody for Western blotting, immunoprecipitation, and mass spectrometry, we preliminarily determined nuclear proteins that putatively interact with HP1 to form complexes to regulate gene expression, heterochromatin formation, and translational complexes in the cercariae stage. So far, our data is to give some insights into nuclear interactors in S. mansoni cercariae. SignificanceThe significance of this original paper is the evidence for Heterochromatin Protein (HP1), interaction with nuclear proteins in the cercariae stage. Schistosoma mansoni cercariae are the infective stage of the human beings in endemic areas of schistosomiasis, a neglected disease, most prevalent in Brazil and Africa. While cercariae are waiting for a host, it does not feed, gene expression is silent and protein synthesis is stopped. These biochemical mechanisms are recovered when cercariae find a human host, but all proteins and mechanisms are not still elucidated. Until now, literature shows that these phenomena are regulated by epigenetics mechanisms, dependent of histone posttranslational modifications. But we have few pieces of evidence about the other proteins that participates in these processes and which are the co-regulators of expression.

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