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Amoebiasis vaccine development: a snapshot on E. histolytica with emphasis on perspectives of Gal/GalNAc lectin

Version 2 2024-06-13, 15:38
Version 1 2016-07-06, 14:08
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 15:38 authored by RS Singh, AK Walia, JR Kanwar, JF Kennedy
Amoebiasis/amebiasis is a gastrointestinal infection caused by an enteric dwelling protozoan, Entamoeba histolytica. The disease is endemic in the developing world and is transmitted mainly via the faecal-oral route (e.g., in water or food) and may or may not be symptomatic. This disease of socio-economic importance worldwide involves parasite adherence and cytolysis of human cells followed by invasion that is mediated by galactose-binding (Gal/GalNAc) surface lectin. Disruption of the mucus layer leads to invasive intestinal and extraintestinal infection. Gal-lectin based vaccinations have conferred protection in various animal models against E. histolytica infections. Keeping in view the pivotal role of Gal/GalNAc lectin in amoebiasis vaccine development, its regulation, genomic view of the parasite involving gene conversion in lectin gene families, current knowledge about involvement of Gal/GalNAc lectin in adherence, pathogenicity, signalling, encystment, generating host immune response, and in turn protozoa escape strategies, and finally its role as effective vaccine candidate has been described. This review will help researchers to explore pathogenesis mechanism along with genomic studies and will also provide a framework for future amoebiasis vaccine development studies.

History

Journal

International journal of biological macromolecules

Volume

91

Pagination

258-268

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

eISSN

1879-0003

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, Elsevier B.V.

Publisher

Elsevier