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A secreted schistosome cathepsin B1 cysteine protease and acute schistosome infection induce a transient T helper 17 response.

Kateryna SoloviovaEllen C FoxJohn Pius DaltonConor R CaffreyStephen J Davies
Published in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2019)
The natural history of schistosome infection in the mammalian host is determined by CD4+ T helper responses mounted against different parasite life cycle stages. A T helper 2 (TH2) response to schistosome eggs is required for host survival and establishment of chronic infection. However, a TH2 cell-derived cytokine also contributes to an immune milieu that is conducive to schistosome growth and development. Thus, the same responses that allow for host survival have been co-opted by schistosomes to facilitate parasite development and transmission, underscoring the significance of CD4+ T cell responses to both worms and eggs in the natural history of schistosome infection. Here we show that a cathepsin B1 cysteine protease secreted by schistosome worms not only induces TH2 responses, but also TH1 and TH17 responses, by a mechanism that is dependent on the proteolytic activity of the enzyme. Further investigation revealed that, in addition to the expected TH1 and TH2 responses, acute schistosome infection also induces a transient TH17 response that is rapidly down-regulated at the onset of oviposition. TH17 responses are implicated in the development of severe egg-induced pathology. The regulation of worm-induced TH17 responses during acute infection could therefore influence the expression of high and low pathology states as infection progresses.
Keyphrases
  • drug induced
  • liver failure
  • life cycle
  • poor prognosis
  • intensive care unit
  • transcription factor
  • high glucose
  • zika virus
  • aortic dissection
  • early onset
  • free survival
  • nk cells