Project description:Ticks, as obligate blood-feeding arthropod vectors of pathogenic viruses, bacteria, protozoa and helminths, are responsible for prevalent tick-borne diseases (TBDs) worldwide. This arthropod constitutes the second most common that transmit pathogens among humans, after mosquitoes, and the first vector in domestic animals. Vaccines constitute the safest and more effective approach to control tick and TBDs, but this is in constant research to identify new antigens and improve vaccines formulations. The tick antigen Subolesin is a well-known vaccine protective antigen with a highly conserved sequence at both gene and protein levels in the Ixodidae and among arthropods and vertebrates. In this study, RNAseq and proteomic analyses were carried out in wild type and Subolesin knockdown tick ISE6 cells in order to identify and characterize the functional implications of Subolesin in tick cells, demonstrating once again the importance of this antigen in vaccine development against tick and TBDs.
Project description:The impact of global climate change on the transmission dynamics of infectious diseases is the subject of extensive debate. The transmission of mosquito-borne viral diseases is particularly complex, with climatic variables directly affecting many parameters associated with the prevalence of disease vectors. While evidence shows that warmer temperatures often decrease the extrinsic incubation period of an arthropod-borne virus (arbovirus), exposure to cooler temperatures often predisposes disease vector mosquitoes to higher infection rates. RNA interference pathways are essential to antiviral immunity in the mosquito; however, few experiments have explored the effects of temperature on the RNAi machinery.