Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.ufba.br/handle/ri/8543
metadata.dc.type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Antigenicity of cystatin-binding proteins from parasitic protozoan Detection by a proteinase inhibitor based capture immunoassay (PINC-ELISA)
Other Titles: Journal of Immunological Methods
Authors: Scharfstein, Julio
Abrahamson, Magnus
Souza, Clarissa Beatriz Palatnik de
Barral, Aldina Maria Prado
Silva, Ian Victor
metadata.dc.creator: Scharfstein, Julio
Abrahamson, Magnus
Souza, Clarissa Beatriz Palatnik de
Barral, Aldina Maria Prado
Silva, Ian Victor
Abstract: A novel immunoassay (PINC-ELISA) was designed using proteinase inhibitors of the cystatin superfamily (PINC) in the solid phase, to promote the selective capture of cysteine proteinases. The method was applied in the identification of papain-like antigens from parasitic protozoa. PINC of human origin, namely recombinant cystatin C (r-cystatin C) or low molecular weight kininogen were used in the assays to adsorb proteases contained in cell lysates from various trypanosomatids. The PINC-ELISA was at first optimized with the major cysteine proteinase from Trypanosoma cruzi (known as View the MathML source or cruzipain), an antigen whose serodiagnostic properties were previously established. Cruzipain is selectively adsorbed from crude extracts of T. cruzi onto PINC-coated wells; the finding that antibodies bind to epitopes located away from the sites of interaction with r-cystatin or low molecular weight kininogen has allowed for the screening of antibodies in chagasic sera, the methodology being advantageous in that it dispensed prior purification of the proteinase antigen. The PINC-ELISA was then carried out with lysates originating from Leishmania m. amazonensis (amastigotes) or Leishmania donovani (promastigotes). Complexes between solid-phase r-cystatin C and antigenic ligands in the lysates were again detected. The Leishmania molecules which bound to r-cystatin C, were respectively recognized by serum antibodies from mice chronically infected with L. amazonensis or from patients with visceral leishmaniasis. Direct evidence for the presence of cysteine proteinases in lysates from L. donovani was then obtained, using synthetic fluorogenic substrates. Due to the broad inhibition profile of r-cystatin C and the marked antigenicity of parasitic cysteine proteinases, such enzymes can be readily detected by PINC-ELISA, without requirement for prior knowledge of their substrate specificities.
Keywords: Cysteine proteinase
Cystatin
Kininogen
Immunoassay
Trypanosoma cruzi
Leishmania
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/8543
Issue Date: 1995
Appears in Collections:Artigo Publicado em Periódico (Faculdade de Medicina)

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