3 research outputs found
A cathepsin L-like protease from Strongylus vulgaris: An orthologue of Caenorhabditis elegans CPL-1
Cathespin L-like proteases (CPLs), characterized from a wide range of helminths, are significant in helminth
biology. For example, in Caenorhabditis elegans CPL is essential for embryogenesis. Here, we report
a cathepsin L-like gene from three species of strongyles that parasitize the horse, and describe the isolation
of a cpl gene (Sv-cpl-1) from Strongylus vulgaris, the first such from equine strongyles. It encodes a
protein of 354 amino acids with high similarity to other parasitic Strongylida (90–91%), and C. elegans
CPL-1 (87%), a member of the same Clade. As S. vulgaris cpl-1 rescued the embryonic lethal phenotype
of the C. elegans cpl-1 mutant, these genes may be orthologues, sharing the same function in each species.
Targeting Sv-CPL-1 might enable novel control strategies by decreasing parasite development and
transmission