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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cysteine proteases play critical biological roles in both intracellular and extracellular processes. We characterized Ce-cpl-1, a Caenorhabditis elegans
cathepsin L
-like cysteine protease. RNA interference with Ce-cpl-1 activity resulted in embryonic lethality and a transient delayed growth of larvae to egg producing adults, suggesting an essential role for cpl-1 during embryogenesis, and most likely during post-embryonic development. Cpl-1 gene (Ce-cpl-1:lacZ) is widely expressed in the intestine and hypodermal cells of transgenic worms, while the fusion protein (Ce-CPL-1::GFP) was expressed in the hypodermis, pharynx, and gonad. The CPL-1 native protein accumulates in early to late stage embryos and becomes highly concentrated in gut cells during late embryonic development. CPL-1 is also present near the periphery of the eggshell as well as in the cuticle of larval stages suggesting that it may function not only in embryogenesis but also in further development of the worm. Although the precise role of Ce-CPL-1 during embryogenesis is not yet clear it could be involved in the processing of nutrients responsible for synthesis and/or in the degradation of eggshell. Moreover, an increase in the cpl-1 mRNA is seen in the intermolt period approximately 4 h prior to each molt. During this process Ce-CPL-1 may act as a proteolytic enzyme in the processing/degradation of cuticular or other proteins. Similar localization of a related
cathepsin L
in the filarial nematode Onchocerca
volvulus
, eggshell and cuticle, suggests that some of the Ce-CPL-1 function during development may be conserved in other parasitic nematodes.
...
PMID:Cathepsin L is essential for embryogenesis and development of Caenorhabditis elegans. 1170 40
Cysteine proteinases are involved in a variety of important biological processes and have been implicated in molting and tissue remodeling in free living and parasitic nematodes. We show that in the lymphatic filarial nematode Brugia pahangi molting of third-stage larvae (L3) to fourth-stage larvae is dependent on the activity of a
cathepsin L
-like cysteine protease (CPL), which can be detected in the excretory/secretory (ES) products of molting L3. Directed cloning of a cysteine protease gene in B. pahangi and analysis of the expressed sequence tag (EST) and genomic sequences of the closely related human lymphatic filarial nematode Brugia malayi have identified a family of CPLs. One group of these enzymes, Bm-cpl-1, -4, -5 and Bp-cpl-4, is highly expressed in the B. malayi and B. pahangi infective L3 larvae. Immunolocalization indicates that the corresponding enzymes are synthesized and stored in granules of the glandular esophagus of L3 and released during the molting process. Functional analysis of these genes in Brugia and closely related CPL genes identified in the filarial nematode Onchocerca
volvulus
and the free living model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans indicate that these genes are also involved in cuticle and eggshell remodeling.
...
PMID:A gene family of cathepsin L-like proteases of filarial nematodes are associated with larval molting and cuticle and eggshell remodeling. 1547 1
We describe the successful use of RNA interference (RNAi) to investigate gene function in the human filarial parasite Onchocerca
volvulus
third-stage larvae (L3). We targeted two specific gene products, the O.
volvulus
cathepsin L
(Ov-CPL) and cathepsin Z-like (Ov-CPZ) cysteine proteases, which were proposed to function during O.
volvulus
L3 molting. We show that fluorescent-labeled Cy3-dsRNA corresponding to cpl or cpz regions encoding the mature enzymes can enter the larvae. The molting rate of larvae treated overnight with 0.5 mg ml(-1) cpl was reduced by 92% and 86% in comparison to normal control worms. It appeared that although the larvae started the molting process the last stage of molting, ecdysis was inhibited. The effect was gene specific, as larvae that did not molt in the presence of cpl or cpz dsRNA expressed the other cysteine protease, CPZ and CPL, respectively. This was confirmed by immunoelectron microscopy using antibodies directed against each enzyme. Our present study validate conclusively that both enzymes are essential for the molting of O.
volvulus
L3 to fourth-stage larvae. We also confirmed that the activity of the enzymes is specific to the changes that occur during the molting process on days 1-3, when the separation between the cuticles is in progress. The development of RNAi in O.
volvulus
L3 could further help study many of the abundant L3 and molting L3 genes identified through the filarial genome project, many of which, although have no attributed function, were identified as vaccine candidates or potential drug targets.
...
PMID:RNA interference targeting cathepsin L and Z-like cysteine proteases of Onchocerca volvulus confirmed their essential function during L3 molting. 1555 28