Abstract:
During their blood meals, arthropod vectors including tsetse flies inject saliva into their
hosts to enhance their feeding efficiency. The salivary gland secretions include a number
of proteins some of which can elicit the host’s immune response thereby being useful
candidates for investigation as vaccine targets and/or markers of exposure to bites of
these vectors which may aid disease control. This project evaluated the potential of tsetse
salivary gland growth factor- 2 (TSGF-2) and tsetse antigen- 5 (Tag-5) as markers of
exposure to tsetse bites in cattle.
Both rTSGF-2 (810bp falling between 375 and 1094bp of the TSGF-2 cDNA) and rTag-5
(390bp falling between 78 and 468bp of the Tag-5 cDNA) gene fragments were
expressed in BL21 DE3 E. coli expression host to obtain the respective recombinant
proteins, rTSGF-2 and rTag-5. The rTSGF-2 was purified by Ni-NTA agarose column
and, the two proteins were run on SDS and trans-blotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane,
which was probed with pooled plasma from cattle of different tsetse exposure status. The
ELISA tests were also run to show whether rTSGF-2 could be used to distinguish
between tsetse exposed and non exposed cattle as well as trypanosome positive and
negative cattle.
Results revealed that rTSGF- 2 was expressed and purified in sufficient amounts of the
expected size (31kDa) and it was recognized by plasma from tsetse exposed cattle.
However, Western blotting and ELISA could neither distinguish between tsetse exposed
from non exposed cattle (P˃0.05) nor trypanosome positive from negative cattle
(P˃0.05). This would indicate possible cross reactions with proteins from other vectors such as mosquitoes and ticks to which the control animals could as well have been
exposed. The rTag- 5 was expressed in very low quantities which hindered its
purification making some of the subsequent tests impossible. It was also recognized by
plasma from the different groups of cattle as above. Therefore, both rTSGF-2 and rTag-5
are recognized by cattle plasma antibodies but they are not reliable as markers of
exposure specific to tsetse bites and cannot specifically determine trypanosome infection
status in cattle. Similar proteins secreted by other vectors should be evaluated for
recognition by antibodies produced against rTSGF-2 and rTag-5 to check for possible
cross reaction, and future studies should be based on proteins expressed from gene
regions unique to Glossina to limit such cross reactions.
Language:
English
Date of publication:
2013
Country:
Region Focus:
East Africa
Collection:
RUFORUM Theses and Dissertations
Agris Subject Categories:
Licence conditions:
Open Access
Supervisor:
Dr. Enock Matovu and Prof. GeorgeWilliam Lubega, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources and Biosecurity, Makerere University, and Prof. Serap Askoy, Yale University
Form:
Printed resource
Publisher:
ISSN:
E_ISSN:
Edition: