The heat shock protein 70 also acts as a switch that triggers Schistosoma larvae to begin penetrating the skin and transforming into the parasitic flatworms.
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The finding also opens the possibility that the protein - called heat shock protein 70, or Hsp70, common throughout the animal kingdom - may be used by other disease-causing parasites to invade humans.
The research is published in the online journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.
"Normally, heat shock proteins play roles in individual cells to modulate proteins," said Emmitt Jolly, associate professor of biology at Case Western Reserve and co-author of the study. "It's the first time that we know of that it's been shown Hsp70 can modulate the behavior of an entire organism. Not only that, it modulates its activity in terms of invading a host."
Jolly and PhD student Kenji Ishida are trying to uncover the complicated lifecycle of the flatworms.
The primary drug used to treat the disease is praziquantil. "Praziquantil has been used for decades, and there's concern for the development of resistance," Ishida said. "Identifying new targets for new drug development is important to the infectious disease community."
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Hsf1's localization to the glands made no sense because the gland has no nucleus, where genes are turned on, Jolly said. So Ishida began looking further, at Hsf1 targets, including Hsp70.
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Before testing, the researchers believed that by blocking Hsp70 in the cercariae, the cercariae would die, Ishida said. "We know heat shock proteins play a role in helping cells cope with stress," Ishida said. "There must be stress in the transition from living in cool, fresh water into a warm host's salty blood."
But, instead, they saw Hsp70 induced a change in the organism's behavior, indicating the protein is likely a regulator of the molecular signaling pathway associated with invasion.
By treating cercariae with the Hsp70 modulator 2-phenylethynesulfonamide (PES), they initiated the process of cercarial honing and invasion in the absence of a host or skin lipids, linoleic acid and other host-specific substances known to stimulate honing and invasion.
Because Hsp70 is largely conserved, and is present, in fauna ranging from single-celled bacteria to fungi to animals, the researchers believe other parasites may also employ Hsp70 in their invasion process.
Jolly and Ishida are now trying to develop tools to study the genetics as well as the signaling pathways of Schistosoma immediately after they invade a host but before inflicting disease.
"If we can understand what's going on inside, that would open up a world of possibilities for drug targets," Jolly said. "This research is a step toward that."
Source-Eurekalert