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Angela L. Williamson, Paul J. Brindley, Giovanni Abbenante, Bennett J. D. Datu, Paul Prociv, Colin Berry, Karen Girdwood, David I. Pritchard, David P. Fairlie, Peter J. Hotez, Bin Zhan, Alex Loukas, Hookworm Aspartic Protease, Na-APR-2, Cleaves Human Hemoglobin and Serum Proteins in a Host-Specific Fashion, The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 187, Issue 3, 1 February 2003, Pages 484–494, https://doi.org/10.1086/367708
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Abstract
Hookworms are voracious blood-feeders. The cloning and functional expression of an aspartic protease, Na-APR-2, from the human hookworm Necator americanus are described here. Na-APR-2 is more similar to a family of nematode-specific, aspartic proteases than it is to cathepsin D or pepsin, and the term “nemepsins” for members of this family of nematode-specific hydrolases is proposed. Na-apr-2 mRNA was detected in blood-feeding, developmental stages only of N. americanus and the protease was expressed in the intestinal lumen, amphids, and excretory glands. Recombinant Na-APR-2 cleaved human hemoglobin (Hb) and serum proteins almost twice as efficiently as the orthologous substrates from the nonpermissive dog host. Moreover, only 25% of the Na-APR-2 cleavage sites within human Hb were shared with those generated by the related N. americanus cathepsin D, Na-APR-1. Antiserum against Na-APR-2 inhibited migration of 50% of third-stage N. americanus larvae through skin, which suggests that aspartic proteases might be effective vaccines against human hookworm disease