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Cysteine peptidases of Eudiplozoon nipponicum: a broad repertoire of structurally assorted cathepsins L in contrast to the scarcity of cathepsins B in an invasive species of haematophagous monogenean of common carp.

Lucie JedličkováHana DvořákováJan DvořákMartin KašnýLenka UlrychováJiří VorelVojtěch ŽárskýLibor Mikeš
Published in: Parasites & vectors (2018)
To our knowledge, this study represents the first complex bioinformatic and biochemical characterisation of cysteine peptidases in a monogenean. Eudiplozoon nipponicum adults express a variety of CLs, which are the most abundant peptidases in the worms. The properties and localisation of the two heterologously expressed EnCLs indicate a central role in the (partially extracellular?) digestion of host blood proteins. High variability of substrate-binding sites in the set of EnCLs suggests specific adaptation to a range of biological processes that require proteolysis. Surprisingly, a single cathepsin B is expressed by the parasite and it is not involved in digestion, but probably in vitellogenesis.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • fluorescent probe
  • magnetic resonance
  • living cells
  • anaerobic digestion
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • contrast enhanced
  • high throughput sequencing