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Immunoproteomic and bioinformatic approaches to identify secreted Leishmania amazonensis, L. braziliensis, and L. infantum proteins with specific reactivity using canine serum

•Immunoproteomic approaches was used to identify reactive proteins in Leishmania spp.•Twenty-eight non-redundant immunogenic proteins were identified.•Bioinformatic analyses highlighted six putative secreted proteins with specific reactivity.•These proteins may be used as targets for diagnosis of Le...

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Published in:Veterinary parasitology 2016-06, Vol.223, p.115-119
Main Authors: Lima, B.S.S., Fialho, L.C., Pires, S.F., Tafuri, W.L., Andrade, H.M.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c441t-e621bf77910eeba9a222635fab1fa076fccd8581a65ca6a366b464fe2a8fe113
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container_title Veterinary parasitology
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creator Lima, B.S.S.
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description •Immunoproteomic approaches was used to identify reactive proteins in Leishmania spp.•Twenty-eight non-redundant immunogenic proteins were identified.•Bioinformatic analyses highlighted six putative secreted proteins with specific reactivity.•These proteins may be used as targets for diagnosis of Leishmania infection. Leishmania spp have a wide range of hosts, and each host can harbor several Leishmania species. Dogs, for example, are frequently infected by Leishmania infantum, where they constitute its main reservoir, but they also serve as hosts for L. braziliensis and L. amazonensis. Serological tests for antibody detection are valuable tools for diagnosis of L. infantum infection due to the high levels of antibodies induced, unlike what is observed in L. amazonensis and L. braziliensis infections. Likewise, serology-based antigen-detection can be useful as an approach to diagnose any Leishmania species infection using different corporal fluid samples. Immunogenic and secreted proteins constitute powerful targets for diagnostic methods in antigen detection. As such, we performed immunoproteomic (2-DE, western blot and mass spectrometry) and bioinformatic screening to search for reactive and secreted proteins from L. amazonensis, L. braziliensis, and L. infantum. Twenty-eight non-redundant proteins were identified, among which, six were reactive only in L. amazonensis extracts, 10 in L. braziliensis extracts, and seven in L. infantum extracts. After bioinformatic analysis, seven proteins were predicted to be secreted, two of which were reactive only in L. amazonensis extracts (52kDa PDI and the glucose-regulated protein 78), one in L. braziliensis extracts (pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 beta subunit) and three in L. infantum extracts (two conserved hypothetical proteins and elongation factor 1-beta). We propose that proteins can be suitable targets for diagnostic methods based on antigen detection.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.vetpar.2016.04.019
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects Animals
Computational Biology - methods
Diagnosis
Dog Diseases - diagnosis
Dog Diseases - parasitology
Dogs
Immunoproteins - isolation & purification
Immunoproteome
Leishmania
Leishmania - classification
Leishmania - isolation & purification
Leishmania amazonensis
Leishmania infantum
Leishmaniasis - diagnosis
Leishmaniasis - parasitology
Leishmaniasis - veterinary
Proteomics - methods
Secreted antigens
title Immunoproteomic and bioinformatic approaches to identify secreted Leishmania amazonensis, L. braziliensis, and L. infantum proteins with specific reactivity using canine serum
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