Variability and Action Mechanism of a Family of Anticomplement Proteins in Ixodes ricinus
暂无分享,去创建一个
Michel Brossard | Edmond Godfroid | B. Charloteaux | L. Vanhamme | M. Brossard | Jérôme Beaufays | Y. Decrem | E. Godfroid | Pierre-Paul Prévôt | Luc Vanhamme | Bernard Couvreur | Jérôme Beaufays | Cédric Charon | Kathia Lahaye | François Gensale | Valérie Denis | Benoît Charloteaux | Yves Decrem | Pierre-Paul Prévôt | B. Couvreur | Kathia Lahaye | V. Denis | C. Charon | François Gensale | Yves Decrem
[1] Jeroen Raes,et al. Duplication and divergence: the evolution of new genes and old ideas. , 2004, Annual review of genetics.
[2] J. Andersen,et al. The transcriptome of the salivary glands of the female western black-legged tick Ixodes pacificus (Acari: Ixodidae). , 2005, Insect biochemistry and molecular biology.
[3] K. Nicholas,et al. GeneDoc: Analysis and visualization of genetic variation , 1997 .
[4] D. Hourcade,et al. The regulators of complement activation (RCA) gene cluster. , 1989, Advances in immunology.
[5] C. Beard,et al. Capillary feeding of specific dsRNA induces silencing of the isac gene in nymphal Ixodes scapularis ticks , 2005, Insect molecular biology.
[6] A. Louw,et al. Evolution of hematophagy in ticks: common origins for blood coagulation and platelet aggregation inhibitors from soft ticks of the genus Ornithodoros. , 2002, Molecular biology and evolution.
[7] Zhe Sun,et al. The dimeric and trimeric solution structures of the multidomain complement protein properdin by X-ray scattering, analytical ultracentrifugation and constrained modelling. , 2004, Journal of molecular biology.
[8] E. Fikrig,et al. Salp25D, an Ixodes scapularis antioxidant, is 1 of 14 immunodominant antigens in engorged tick salivary glands. , 2001, The Journal of infectious diseases.
[9] D. Hourcade,et al. Properdin Can Initiate Complement Activation by Binding Specific Target Surfaces and Providing a Platform for De Novo Convertase Assembly1 , 2007, The Journal of Immunology.
[10] R. DeSalle,et al. Adaptive Evolution of Genes and Genomes , 2000, Heredity.
[11] M. Pangburn,et al. The C3 convertase of the alternative pathway of human complement. Enzymic properties of the bimolecular proteinase. , 1986, The Biochemical journal.
[12] R. Discipio,et al. The binding of human complement proteins C5, factor B, beta 1H and properdin to complement fragment C3b on zymosan. , 1981, The Biochemical journal.
[13] K. Joiner. Complement evasion by bacteria and parasites. , 1988, Annual review of microbiology.
[14] M. Brossard,et al. Immunosuppressive effects of Ixodes ricinus tick saliva or salivary gland extracts on innate and acquired immune response of BALB/c mice , 2002, Parasitology Research.
[15] J. Thurman,et al. The Central Role of the Alternative Complement Pathway in Human Disease1 , 2006, The Journal of Immunology.
[16] J. Ribeiro,et al. Ixodes dammini: salivary anti-complement activity. , 1987, Experimental parasitology.
[17] J. Valenzuela,et al. Exploring tick saliva: from biochemistry to ‘sialomes’ and functional genomics , 2004, Parasitology.
[18] R. Brasseur,et al. Anti-hemostatic Effects of a Serpin from the Saliva of the Tick Ixodes ricinus* , 2006, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[19] J. Bantle,et al. Genome size and organization in the ixodid tick Amblyomma americanum (L.) , 1994, Insect molecular biology.
[20] A. Sher,et al. Evasion of innate immunity by parasitic protozoa , 2002, Nature Immunology.
[21] J. Mornon,et al. Hydrophobic cluster analysis: An efficient new way to compare and analyse amino acid sequences , 1987, FEBS letters.
[22] T. Miwa,et al. Activator-specific requirement of properdin in the initiation and amplification of the alternative pathway complement. , 2008, Blood.
[23] R. Pérez-Sánchez,et al. Host immune response evasion strategies in Ornithodoros erraticus and O. moubata and their relationship to the development of an antiargasid vaccine , 1997, Parasite immunology.
[24] D. Fearon,et al. Properdin: binding to C3b and stabilization of the C3b-dependent C3 convertase , 1975, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[25] R. Würzner,et al. Complement escape of human pathogenic bacteria by acquisition of complement regulators. , 2006, Molecular immunology.
[26] L. Matis,et al. Inhibition of complement activity by humanized anti-C5 antibody and single-chain Fv. , 1996, Molecular immunology.
[27] J. Bedell,et al. Cloning and characterization of the white gene from Anopheles gambiae , 1995, Insect molecular biology.
[28] A. Milne. The ecology of the sheep tick, Ixodes ricinus L. , 1944, Parasitology.
[29] Robert B Sim,et al. Investigation of the mechanisms of anti-complement activity in Ixodes ricinus ticks. , 2005, Molecular immunology.
[30] J. Ribeiro,et al. Role of arthropod saliva in blood feeding: sialome and post-sialome perspectives. , 2003, Annual review of entomology.
[31] S. Wikel. Acquired resistance to ticks: expression of resistance by C4-deficient guinea pigs. , 1979, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.
[32] M. Mizuno,et al. The possibilities and pitfalls for anti-complement therapies in inflammatory diseases. , 2004, Current drug targets. Inflammation and allergy.
[33] K. Reid,et al. Properdin, the terminal complement components, thrombospondin and the circumsporozoite protein of malaria parasites contain similar sequence motifs , 1988, Nature.
[34] S. Randolph,et al. Ixodes ticks: serum species sensitivity of anticomplement activity. , 1999, Experimental parasitology.
[35] M. Nonaka,et al. Genomic view of the evolution of the complement system , 2006, Immunogenetics.
[36] T. Mollnes,et al. Strategies of therapeutic complement inhibition. , 2006, Molecular immunology.
[37] J. Thurman,et al. The alternative pathway of complement in disease: opportunities for therapeutic targeting. , 2004, Molecular immunology.
[38] Sudhir Kumar,et al. MEGA3: Integrated software for Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis and sequence alignment , 2004, Briefings Bioinform..
[39] G. Nybakken,et al. West Nile virus nonstructural protein NS1 inhibits complement activation by binding the regulatory protein factor H , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[40] J. Ribeiro. Role of saliva in blood-feeding by arthropods. , 1987, Annual review of entomology.
[41] D I Stuart,et al. Tick histamine-binding proteins: isolation, cloning, and three-dimensional structure. , 1999, Molecular cell.
[42] G. Lanzaro,et al. Antigenic diversity in maxadilan, a salivary protein from the sand fly vector of American visceral leishmaniasis. , 2004, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.
[43] J. Ribeiro,et al. Negative effect of antibodies against maxadilan on the fitness of the sand fly vector of American visceral leishmaniasis. , 2004, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.
[44] R. Schreiber,et al. Assembly of the cytolytic alternative pathway of complement from 11 isolated plasma proteins , 1978, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[45] A. Krogh,et al. Predicting transmembrane protein topology with a hidden Markov model: application to complete genomes. , 2001, Journal of molecular biology.
[46] J. Anderson. Epizootiology of Lyme borreliosis. , 1991, Scandinavian journal of infectious diseases. Supplementum.
[47] P. Sharp,et al. Ixodes ticks belonging to the Ixodes ricinus complex encode a family of anticomplement proteins , 2007, Insect molecular biology.
[48] John D Lambris,et al. Mechanism of complement inactivation by glycoprotein C of herpes simplex virus. , 1997, Journal of immunology.
[49] J. Ribeiro,et al. Purification, Cloning, and Expression of a Novel Salivary Anticomplement Protein from the Tick, Ixodes scapularis * , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[50] A. James,et al. Variation in the salivary peptide, maxadilan, from species in the Lutzomyia longipalpis complex , 1999, Insect molecular biology.
[51] A. Milne. The ecology of the sheep tick, Ixodes ricinus L. Host relationships of the tick: Part 2. Observations on hill and moorland grazings in northern England , 1949, Parasitology.
[52] J. Ribeiro,et al. Exploring the sialome of the tick Ixodes scapularis. , 2002, The Journal of experimental biology.
[53] D. Hourcade. The Role of Properdin in the Assembly of the Alternative Pathway C3 Convertases of Complement* , 2006, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[54] G. Labesse,et al. Deciphering protein sequence information through hydrophobic cluster analysis (HCA): current status and perspectives , 1997, Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences CMLS.
[55] D. Kordis,et al. Adaptive evolution of animal toxin multigene families. , 2000, Gene.
[56] C. Smith,et al. Molecular architecture of human properdin, a positive regulator of the alternative pathway of complement. , 1984, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[57] R. Gothe,et al. Biochemical perspectives on paralysis and other forms of toxicoses caused by ticks , 2004, Parasitology.
[58] H. Hoogstraal,et al. Tick-Host Specificity , 1982 .
[59] P. A. Peterson,et al. Chemical characterization of human factor B of the alternate pathway of complement activation. , 1977, Biochemistry.
[60] J. Maunder. Biology of ticks (vol. I ) , 1992 .
[61] F. Guerrero,et al. Genome size and organization in the blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis and the Southern cattle tick, Boophilus microplus , 2005, Insect molecular biology.
[62] S. Perkins,et al. Neutron and X-ray scattering studies on the human complement protein properdin provide an analysis of the thrombospondin repeat. , 1991, Biochemistry.
[63] Noel R. Rose,et al. Manual of clinical laboratory immunology , 2002 .
[64] Dr. Susumu Ohno. Evolution by Gene Duplication , 1970, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
[65] S. Brunak,et al. Prediction, conservation analysis, and structural characterization of mammalian mucin-type O-glycosylation sites. , 2005, Glycobiology.
[66] John D Lambris,et al. Complement-targeted therapeutics , 2007, Nature Biotechnology.
[67] A. Day,et al. Structure-function relationships of the complement components. , 1989, Immunology today.
[68] M. Pangburn,et al. Analysis of the natural polymeric forms of human properdin and their functions in complement activation. , 1989, Journal of immunology.
[69] D. Sonenshine. Biology of ticks , 1991 .
[70] O. Gascuel,et al. A simple, fast, and accurate algorithm to estimate large phylogenies by maximum likelihood. , 2003, Systematic biology.
[71] L. Kovář. Tick saliva in anti-tick immunity and pathogen transmission , 2008, Folia Microbiologica.
[72] Š. Kaluz,et al. Molecular cloning of the cDNA coding for properdin, a positive regulator of the alternative pathway of human complement , 1991, European journal of immunology.
[73] B. Finlay,et al. Anti-Immunology: Evasion of the Host Immune System by Bacterial and Viral Pathogens , 2006, Cell.
[74] K. Brunden,et al. Inhibition of complement alternative pathway function with anti-properdin monoclonal antibodies. , 2000, Molecular immunology.
[75] G. R. Carson,et al. Recombinant soluble CR1 suppressed complement activation, inflammation, and necrosis associated with reperfusion of ischemic myocardium. , 1990, Transactions of the Association of American Physicians.
[76] E. Fikrig,et al. Biochemical and Functional Characterization of Salp20, an Ixodes scapularis Tick Salivary Protein that Inhibits the Complement Pathway , 2007, Insect molecular biology.
[77] Henry P. Treffers,et al. Complement , 1966, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.
[78] F. Jongejan,et al. The global importance of ticks , 2004, Parasitology.
[79] G. Paesen,et al. Complement Inhibitor of C5 Activation from the Soft Tick Ornithodoros moubata , 2005, The Journal of Immunology.
[80] Roderic D. M. Page,et al. TreeView: an application to display phylogenetic trees on personal computers , 1996, Comput. Appl. Biosci..
[81] S. Wikel,et al. Acquired resistance to ticks. III. Cobra venom factor and the resistance response. , 1977, Immunology.
[82] S. Wikel,et al. An annotated catalog of salivary gland transcripts from Ixodes scapularis ticks. , 2006, Insect biochemistry and molecular biology.
[83] R. Harrison,et al. [7] The third, fourth, and fifth components of human complement: Isolation and biochemical properties , 1981 .
[84] E. Coligan. Current protocols in immunology , 1991 .
[85] S. Brunak,et al. Locating proteins in the cell using TargetP, SignalP and related tools , 2007, Nature Protocols.
[86] M. Kock,et al. Structure and Function of Recombinant Cobra Venom Factor* , 2004, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[87] D. Kordis,et al. Adaptive evolution in the snake venom Kunitz/BPTI protein family , 2003, FEBS letters.
[88] M. Kozak. The scanning model for translation: an update , 1989, The Journal of cell biology.
[89] N. Grishin,et al. Reconstruction of ancestral protein sequences and its applications , 2004, BMC Evolutionary Biology.
[90] J. Renauld,et al. The paralogous salivary anti-complement proteins IRAC I and IRAC II encoded by Ixodes ricinus ticks have broad and complementary inhibitory activities against the complement of different host species. , 2007, Microbes and infection.
[91] Paolo Frasconi,et al. Disulfide connectivity prediction using recursive neural networks and evolutionary information , 2004, Bioinform..
[92] R. Brodsky,et al. Discovery and development of the complement inhibitor eculizumab for the treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria , 2007, Nature Biotechnology.