Tick-parasite interactions at the host interface
P. A. Nuttall
CEH Institute of Virology and
Environmental Microbiology, Oxford OX1 3SR, United Kingdom
Ticks were once
described as “..disgusting parasitic animals..” (Aristotle) but
now they are considered “supreme pharmacologists.” This change
of attitude has arisen from a greater understanding of how ticks
feed on the blood of their hosts, and how the pharmacological
properties of tick saliva promote the transmission of tick-borne
pathogens. Ixodid ticks in particular face one of the greatest
challenges of all parasites. To survive, they must attach and
remain feeding on a host for several days or weeks. The physical
and chemical processes of feeding, and long duration of
attachment, provoke host haemostatic, inflammatory and immune
responses. Ticks counterattack with anti-haemostatic,
anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory substances secreted in
their saliva. Included in this armoury are proteins that bind
immunoglobulins, histamine, and serotonin, and various cytokine
regulators that affect the production or activity of several
cytokines, including interferons. As a result of the
pharmacological activities of this rich cocktail of bioactive
saliva molecules, the feeding pool within the skin becomes an
immunologically privileged site. Any pathogens (viruses,
bacteria, protozoa) transmitted by infected ticks into the
feeding pool, or that are acquired by feeding ticks from
infected hosts, will benefit from a supportive ecological niche
created by the tick. Such a phenomenon, often referred to as
‘saliva-activated transmission,’ has been reported for several
tick-borne pathogens. The challenge now is to determine whether
this immunologically privileged feeding site can be destroyed,
and pathogen transmission prevented.
Index
terms: ticks, blood-feeding,
immunomodulation, vector-borne pathogen transmission.
Copyright: The copyrights of
this original work belong to the author (see right-most box of
the title table). This document also appears in the Plenury
Lectures: ABSTRACT BOOK I – XXI-International Congress of
Entomology, Brazil, August 20-26, 2000