Significance
Ticks are a burden by themselves to humans and animals, and vectors of viral, bacterial, protozoal and helminthic diseases. Their saliva has anti-clotting, anti-platelet, vasodilatory and immunomodulatory activities that allows successful feeding and pathogen transmission. Previous transcriptomic studies indicate ticks to have over one thousand transcripts coding for secreted salivary proteins. These transcripts code for proteins of diverse families, but not all are transcribed simultaneously, but rather transiently, in a succession. Here we explored the salivary transcriptome and proteome of the brown dog tick, Rhipicephalus sanguineus. A protein database of over 20 thousand sequences was "de novo" assembled from over 600 million nucleotide reads, from where over two thousand polypeptides were identified by mass spectrometry. The proteomic data was shown to vary in time with the transcription profiles, validating the idea that the expression switch may serve as a mechanism of escape from the host immunity. Analysis of the transcripts coding for lipocalin and metalloproteases indicate their genes to contain signals of breakpoint recombination suggesting a new mechanism responsible for the large diversity in tick salivary proteins. These results and the disclosed sequences contribute to our understanding of the success ticks enjoy as ectoparasites, to the development of novel anti-tick methods, and to the discovery of novel pharmacologically active products.
