Abstract

Schistosoma mansoni is a blood fluke parasite that causes schistosomiasis, a debilitating disease of global public health importance. These relatively large parasites are able to survive prolonged periods in the human vasculature without inducing stable blood clots around them. We show here that the intravascular life stages (schistosomula and adult males and females) can all promote significant plasminogen (PLMG) activation in the presence of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). This results in the generation of the potent fibrinolytic agent plasmin which could degrade blood clots forming around the worms in vivo. We demonstrate that S. mansoni enolase (SmEno) is a host-interactive tegumental enzyme that, in recombinant form, can bind PLMG and promote its activation. Like classical members of the enolase protein family, SmEno can catalyze the interconversion of 2-phospho-D-glycerate (2-PGA) and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). The enzyme has maximal activity at pH 7.5, requires Mg2+ for optimal activity and can be inhibited by NaF but not mefloquin. Suppressing expression of the SmEno gene significantly diminishes enolase mRNA levels, protein levels and surface enzyme activity but, surprisingly, does not affect the ability of the worms to promote PLMG activation. Thus, while SmEno can enhance PLMG activation, our analysis suggests that it is not the only contributor to the parasite’s ability to perform this function. We show that the worms possess several other PLMG-binding proteins in addition to SmEno and these may have a greater importance in schistosome-driven PLMG activation.

Highlights

  • Schistosoma mansoni is one of the etiological agents of schistosomiasis, which is considered the most important human helminth disease in terms of global morbidity and mortality. [1,2]

  • We demonstrate that S. mansoni enolase (SmEno) is a host-interactive tegumental enzyme that, in recombinant form, can bind PLMG and promote its activation

  • Schistosoma mansoni parasites can live for years within human blood vessels and seem to be refractory to intravascular thrombus formation

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Summary

Introduction

Schistosoma mansoni is one of the etiological agents of schistosomiasis, which is considered the most important human helminth disease in terms of global morbidity and mortality. [1,2]. Schistosoma mansoni is one of the etiological agents of schistosomiasis, which is considered the most important human helminth disease in terms of global morbidity and mortality. Considering the number of people infected (>200 million) and those at risk of infection (~800 million), schistosomiasis ranks second only to malaria in importance among parasitic diseases [4]. When a person is infected, larval schistosomes (schistosomula) migrate to the blood vessels where they mature and live as pairs in the mesenteric or perivesicular veins for many years [5]. Blood clots are not observed around the parasites within the blood vessels of infected animals and experimental evidence demonstrates that platelets do not bind to schistosomes in vivo or in vitro [8,9]

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