Abstract

Horseflies are economically important blood-feeding arthropods and also a nuisance for humans and vectors for filariasis. They rely heavily on the pharmacological properties of their saliva to get a blood meal and suppress immune reactions of hosts. Little information is available on antihemostatic substances in horsefly salivary glands; especially no horsefly immune suppressants have been reported. By proteomics or peptidomics and coupling transcriptome analysis with pharmacological testing, several families of proteins or peptides, which act mainly on the hemostatic system or immune system of the host, were identified and characterized from 30,000 pairs salivary glands of the horsefly Tabanus yao (Diptera, Tabanidae). They are: (i) a novel family of inhibitors of platelet aggregation including two members, which possibly inhibit platelet aggregation by a novel mechanism and act on platelet membrane, (ii) a novel family of immunosuppressant peptides including 12 members, which can inhibit interferon-gamma production and increase interleukin-10 secretion, (iii) a serine protease inhibitor with 56 amino acid residues containing anticoagulant activity, (iv) a serine protease with anticoagulant activity, (v) a protease with fibrinogenolytic activity, (vi) three families of antimicrobial peptides including six members, (vii) a hyaluronidase, (viii) a vasodilator peptide, which is an isoform of vasotab identified from Hybomitra bimaculata, and interestingly (ix) two metallothioneins, which are the first metallothioneins reported from invertebrate salivary glands. The current work will facilitate the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of the ectoparasite-host relationship and help in identifying novel vaccine targets and novel leading pharmacological compounds.

Highlights

  • Horseflies are economically important blood-feeding arthropods and a nuisance for humans and vectors for filariasis

  • To identify and characterize interesting salivary compounds for understanding the molecular mechanisms of the ectoparasite-host relationship and to help in identifying novel vaccine targets, we used proteomics or peptidomics and transcriptome analysis coupled with pharmacological testing of the activities to investigate pharmacological molecules in the salivary glands of the horsefly T. yao Macquart

  • Purification of Pharmacological Molecules from the Horsefly SGE—As indicated in Fig. 1A, the supernatant of the horsefly salivary gland extract was divided into six peaks after Sephadex G-75 gel filtration

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Summary

Introduction

Horseflies are economically important blood-feeding arthropods and a nuisance for humans and vectors for filariasis. Fraction FL at 22.9 min in Fig. 1B could hydrolyze fibrinogen, and it was found to be a homogeneous protein (named tabfiblysin) with a molecular mass of 36 kDa determined by non-reducing SDS-PAGE analysis. CDNA Cloning, Structure, and Function of Platelet Aggregation Inhibitor from the Horsefly SGE—Two platelet aggregation inhibitors, tabinhibitins 1 and 2, were purified from T. yao Macquart SGE.

Results
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