Tick innate immunity

. 2010 ; 708 () : 137-62.

Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké Médium print

Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem, přehledy

Perzistentní odkaz   https://www.medvik.cz/link/pmid21528697

Ticks are blood feeding parasites transmitting a wide variety of pathogens to their vertebrate hosts. The vector competence of ticks is tightly linked with their immune system. Despite its importance, our knowledge of tick innate immunity is still inadequate and the limited number of sufficiently characterized immune molecules and cellular reactions are dispersed across numerous tick species. The phagocytosis of microbes by tick hemocytes seems to be coupled with a primitive complement-like system, which possibly involves self/nonself recognition by fibrinogen-related lectins and the action of thioester-containing proteins. Ticks do not seem to possess a pro-phenoloxidase system leading to melanization and also coagulation of tick hemolymph has not been experimentally proven. They are capable of defending themselves against microbial infection with a variety of antimicrobial peptides comprising lysozymes, defensins and molecules not found in other invertebrates. Virtually nothing is known about the signaling cascades involved in the regulation of tick antimicrobial immune responses. Midgut immunity is apparently the decisive factor of tick vector competence. The gut content is a hostile environment for ingested microbes, which is mainly due to the antimicrobial activity of hemoglobin fragments generated by the digestion of the host blood as well as other antimicrobial peptides. Reactive oxygen species possibly also play an important role in the tick-pathogen interaction. The recent release of the Ixodes scapularis genome and the feasibility of RNA interference in ticks promise imminent and substantial progress in tick innate immunity research.

Nejnovějších 20 citací...

Zobrazit více v
Medvik | PubMed

Genome sequences of four Ixodes species expands understanding of tick evolution

. 2025 Jan 21 ; 23 (1) : 17. [epub] 20250121

The immune factors involved in the rapid clearance of bacteria from the midgut of the tick Ixodes ricinus

. 2024 ; 14 () : 1450353. [epub] 20240813

Recent Advances in Tick Antigen Discovery and Anti-Tick Vaccine Development

. 2023 Mar 04 ; 24 (5) : . [epub] 20230304

Tick Immune System: What Is Known, the Interconnections, the Gaps, and the Challenges

. 2021 ; 12 () : 628054. [epub] 20210302

Comparison of the hemolysis machinery in two evolutionarily distant blood-feeding arthropod vectors of human diseases

. 2021 Feb ; 15 (2) : e0009151. [epub] 20210204

Poor Unstable Midgut Microbiome of Hard Ticks Contrasts With Abundant and Stable Monospecific Microbiome in Ovaries

. 2020 ; 10 () : 211. [epub] 20200508

Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes ricinus tick cell lines respond to infection with tick-borne encephalitis virus: transcriptomic and proteomic analysis

. 2015 Nov 18 ; 8 () : 599. [epub] 20151118

Deep Sequencing Analysis of the Ixodes ricinus Haemocytome

. 2015 May ; 9 (5) : e0003754. [epub] 20150513

Defensins from the tick Ixodes scapularis are effective against phytopathogenic fungi and the human bacterial pathogen Listeria grayi

. 2014 Dec 03 ; 7 () : 554. [epub] 20141203

Are ticks venomous animals?

. 2014 ; 11 () : 47. [epub] 20140701

Interaction of the tick immune system with transmitted pathogens

. 2013 ; 3 () : 26. [epub] 20130716

Najít záznam

Citační ukazatele

Nahrávání dat ...

    Možnosti archivace