Černá P., Mikeš L. and Volf P., 2002. Salivary gland hyaluronidase in various
species of phlebotominae sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae). Insect Biochemistry
and Molecular Biology 32: 1691-1697. [ISSN 0965-1748] IF1.939
Abstract:
Hyaluronidase activity was detected and partially characterized in salivary gland
extracts of females of six sand fly species. In Phlebotomus papatasi and Lutzomyia
longipalpis the enzyme was active over a broad pH range; the pH optimum was 5.0.
Besides high cleaving activity towards hyaluronic acid, it hydrolyzed chondroitin
sulfates A and C. Hyaluronidases of various sand fly species differed in structure
and sensitivity to reducing conditions. In the subgenera Phlebotomus (P. papatasi
and P. duboscqi) and Adlerius (P. halepensis) the predominant active form of the
enzyme was monomeric with the same apparent molecular weight under nonreducing
and reducing conditions (around 65 kDa for P. papatasi and P. duboscqi and I 10
kDa for P. halepensis). In P. sergenti the enzyme occurred as a putative homodimer
but remained active under reducing conditions when separated into 60 kDa subunits.
In L. longipalpis and P. perniciosus the activity was detectable under non-reducing
conditions only. In P. duboscqi, low enzyme activity was found also in males.
Salivary gland hyaluronidases of sand flies share characteristics with endo-N-acetyl-hexosaminidases
of mammalian sperm cells and corresponding venom enzymes of Hymenoptera. Hypothetically,
they facilitate blood meal acquisition but also may modulate immune reactions
of the host and promote pathogen transmission. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Author Keywords:
hyaluronidase, hyaluronate glycanohydrolase EC 3.2.1.35, spreading factor, Phlebotontus,
Lutzomyia, sand fly, saliva
FLY LUTZOMYIA-LONGIPALPIS, LEISHMANIA-MAJOR, SPERM, SANDFLIES, PROTEINS, PAPATASI,
VECTOR, VENOM, MICE, BEE