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Dive into the research topics where Sabína Havlíková is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabína Havlíková.


Parasites & Vectors | 2014

ANTIDotE: anti-tick vaccines to prevent tick-borne diseases in Europe

Hein Sprong; Jos J. Trentelman; Ingar Seemann; Libor Grubhoffer; Ryan O. M. Rego; Ondrej Hajdusek; Petr Kopáček; Radek Sima; Ard M. Nijhof; Juan Anguita; Peter Winter; Björn Rotter; Sabína Havlíková; Boris Klempa; Theo Schetters; Joppe W. Hovius

Ixodes ricinus transmits bacterial, protozoal and viral pathogens, causing disease and forming an increasing health concern in Europe. ANTIDotE is an European Commission funded consortium of seven institutes, which aims to identify and characterize tick proteins involved in feeding and pathogen transmission. The knowledge gained will be used to develop and evaluate anti-tick vaccines that may prevent multiple human tick-borne diseases. Strategies encompassing anti-tick vaccines to prevent transmission of pathogens to humans, animals or wildlife will be developed with relevant stakeholders with the ultimate aim of reducing the incidence of tick-borne diseases in humans.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Nuclease Tudor-SN Is Involved in Tick dsRNA-Mediated RNA Interference and Feeding but Not in Defense against Flaviviral or Anaplasma phagocytophilum Rickettsial Infection

Nieves Ayllón; Victoria Naranjo; Ondrej Hajdusek; Margarita Villar; Ruth C. Galindo; Katherine M. Kocan; Pilar Alberdi; Radek Sima; Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz; Claudia Rückert; Lesley Bell-Sakyi; Mária Kazimírová; Sabína Havlíková; Boris Klempa; Petr Kopáček; José de la Fuente

Tudor staphylococcal nuclease (Tudor-SN) and Argonaute (Ago) are conserved components of the basic RNA interference (RNAi) machinery with a variety of functions including immune response and gene regulation. The RNAi machinery has been characterized in tick vectors of human and animal diseases but information is not available on the role of Tudor-SN in tick RNAi and other cellular processes. Our hypothesis is that tick Tudor-SN is part of the RNAi machinery and may be involved in innate immune response and other cellular processes. To address this hypothesis, Ixodes scapularis and I. ricinus ticks and/or cell lines were used to annotate and characterize the role of Tudor-SN in dsRNA-mediated RNAi, immune response to infection with the rickettsia Anaplasma phagocytophilum and the flaviviruses TBEV or LGTV and tick feeding. The results showed that Tudor-SN is conserved in ticks and involved in dsRNA-mediated RNAi and tick feeding but not in defense against infection with the examined viral and rickettsial pathogens. The effect of Tudor-SN gene knockdown on tick feeding could be due to down-regulation of genes that are required for protein processing and blood digestion through a mechanism that may involve selective degradation of dsRNAs enriched in G:U pairs that form as a result of adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing. These results demonstrated that Tudor-SN plays a role in tick RNAi pathway and feeding but no strong evidence for a role in innate immune responses to pathogen infection was found.


Vaccine | 2013

Immunization with recombinant subolesin does not reduce tick infection with tick-borne encephalitis virus nor protect mice against disease

Sabína Havlíková; Martina Ličková; Nieves Ayllón; Ladislav Roller; Mária Kazimírová; Mirko Slovák; Juan A. Moreno-Cid; José M. Pérez de la Lastra; Boris Klempa; José de la Fuente

Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is a growing zoonotic disease caused by tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) infection. Although effective vaccines for TBEV are available, on-going vaccination efforts are insufficient to prevent increase in TBE cases annually. Vaccination with arthropod vector antigens to reduce vector infestations and vector capacity allows control of several vector-borne diseases by targeting their common vector. Subolesin (SUB) is a tick protective antigen that has a role in tick innate immunity and other molecular pathways and has been shown to protect against tick infestations and infection by vector-borne pathogens. However, SUB expression and the effect of SUB immunization have not been evaluated for tick-borne viruses. Herein, we showed that SUB expression is downregulated during Ixodes ricinus tick feeding but induced in ticks infected with TBEV, thus supporting a role for this molecule in tick innate immune response to virus infection. Immunization with recombinant SUB reduced SUB mRNA levels in nymphs co-feeding with infected females and suggested and effect on tick infestations in mice. However, SUB immunization did not reduce tick infection with TBEV nor protect mice against TBE. These results suggested that SUB is not a good candidate antigen for vaccination against TBEV and support the characterization of tick-pathogen interactions to identify mechanisms that could be targeted to reduce TBEV infection and transmission by ticks.


Journal of Vector Ecology | 2010

IrML — A Gene Encoding a New Member of the ML Protein Family from the Hard Tick, Ixodes ricinus

Jana Horackova; Nataliia Rudenko; Maryna Golovchenko; Sabína Havlíková; Libor Grubhoffer

ABSTRACT: Blood intake causes significant changes in ticks, triggering vital physiological processes including differential gene expression. A gene encoding Ixodes ricinus ML-domain containing protein (IrML) is one of the set of the genes that are strongly induced by blood meals. IrML belongs to the ML protein family that commonly occurs in diverse organisms and is involved in lipid binding and transport, pathogen recognition or in immune response. An IrML gene was amplified from cDNA of engorged I. ricinus females using the gene-specific primers designed on a basis of partial sequences of related genes for ML domain protein. IrML was shown to be expressed mainly in the gut, but also in salivary glands and hemolymph of all tick developmental stages. Using in situ hybridization, IrML transcripts were detected in type II and III salivary glands acini. Analysis of the predicted structure of I. ricinus ML-domain containing protein and its localization in the tick body could suggest that IrML is a secreted protein and is possibly involved in tick innate immunity.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Tick-Borne Encephalitis Virus Structural Proteins Are the Primary Viral Determinants of Non-Viraemic Transmission between Ticks whereas Non-Structural Proteins Affect Cytotoxicity

Maxim A. Khasnatinov; Andrew Tuplin; Dmitri J. Gritsun; Mirko Slovák; Mária Kazimírová; Martina Ličková; Sabína Havlíková; Boris Klempa; Milan Labuda; Ernest A. Gould; Tamara S. Gritsun

Over 50 million humans live in areas of potential exposure to tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV). The disease exhibits an estimated 16,000 cases recorded annually over 30 European and Asian countries. Conventionally, TBEV transmission to Ixodes spp. ticks occurs whilst feeding on viraemic animals. However, an alternative mechanism of non-viraemic transmission (NVT) between infected and uninfected ticks co-feeding on the same transmission-competent host, has also been demonstrated. Here, using laboratory-bred I. ricinus ticks, we demonstrate low and high efficiency NVT for TBEV strains Vasilchenko (Vs) and Hypr, respectively. These virus strains share high sequence similarity but are classified as two TBEV subtypes. The Vs strain is a Siberian subtype, naturally associated with I. persulcatus ticks whilst the Hypr strain is a European subtype, transmitted by I. ricinus ticks. In mammalian cell culture (porcine kidney cell line PS), Vs and Hypr induce low and high cytopathic effects (cpe), respectively. Using reverse genetics, we engineered a range of viable Vs/Hypr chimaeric strains, with substituted genes. No significant differences in replication rate were detected between wild-type and chimaeric viruses in cell culture. However, the chimaeric strain Vs[Hypr str] (Hypr structural and Vs non-structural genomic regions) demonstrated high efficiency NVT in I. ricinus whereas the counterpart Hypr[Vs str] was not transmitted by NVT, indicating that the virion structural proteins largely determine TBEV NVT transmission efficiency between ticks. In contrast, in cell culture, the extent of cpe was largely determined by the non-structural region of the TBEV genome. Chimaeras with Hypr non-structural genes were more cytotoxic for PS cells when compared with Vs genome-based chimaeras.


Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases | 2018

Diversity of Coxiella-like and Francisella-like endosymbionts, and Rickettsia spp., Coxiella burnetii as pathogens in the tick populations of Slovakia, Central Europe

Eva Špitalská; Olivier Sparagano; Michal Stanko; Katarína Schwarzová; Zdenko Špitalský; Ľudovít Škultéty; Sabína Havlíková

Ticks are important vectors of pathogens affecting humans and animals worldwide. They do not only carry pathogens but diverse commensal and symbiotic microorganisms are also present in ticks. A molecular screening for tick-borne pathogens and endosymbionts was carried out in Ixodes ricinus, Dermacentor reticulatus and Haemaphysalis inermis questing ticks collected in Slovakia. The presence of Rickettsia spp., Coxiella burnetii, Coxiella-like and Francisella-like microorganisms was evaluated by PCR in 605 individuals and by randomly sequencing 66 samples. Four species of rickettsiae (R. raoultii, R. slovaca, R. helvetica and R. monacensis) were identified and reported with an overall prevalence range between 0.4 and 50.3% (±8.0) depending on tick species, sex and locality. Partial sequencing of the gltA gene of 5 chosen samples in H. inermis showed 99% identity with Candidatus Rickettsia hungarica. The total prevalence of C. burnetii in ticks was 2.2 ± 1.7%; bacteria were confirmed in I. ricinus and D. reticulatus ticks. The sequences from 2 D. reticulatus males and 1 I. ricinus female ticks were compared to GenBank submissions and a 99.8% match was obtained with the pathogenic C. burnetii. Coxiella-like endosymbionts were registered in all three species of ticks from all studied sites with an average prevalence of 32.7 ± 3.7%. A phylogenetic analysis of this Coxiella sp. showed that it does not group with the pathogenic C. burnetii. The prevalence of Francisella-like microorganisms in questing ticks was 47.9 ± 3.9%, however H. inermis (n = 108) were not infested. Obtained sequences were 98% identical with previously identified Francisella-like endosymbionts in D. reticulatus and I. ricinus. Coxiella-like and Francisella-like microorganisms were identified for the first time in Slovakia, they might be considered as a non-pathogenic endosymbiont of I. ricinus, D. reticulatus and H. inermis, and future investigations could aim to assess their role in these ticks. However, this work provided further data and broadened our knowledge on bacterial pathogens and endosymbionts present in ticks in Slovakia to help understanding co-infestations, combined treatments and public health issues linked to tick bites.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2009

Functional role of 64P, the candidate transmission-blocking vaccine antigen from the tick, Rhipicephalus appendiculatus.

Sabína Havlíková; Ladislav Roller; Juraj Koči; Adama R. Trimnell; Mária Kazimírová; Boris Klempa; Patricia A. Nuttall


Acta Virologica | 2013

Non-viraemic transmission of tick-borne viruses

Sabína Havlíková; M. Ličková; Boris Klempa


European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2014

Clinical infection of Cantabrian chamois (Rupicapra pyrenaica parva) by louping ill virus: new concern for mountain ungulate conservation?

Francisco Ruiz-Fons; A. Balseiro; Kim Willoughby; Álvaro Oleaga; Mark P. Dagleish; Elisa Pérez-Ramírez; Sabína Havlíková; Boris Klempa; Francisco Llorente; M.P. Martín-Hernando


PLOS ONE | 2015

Tudor-SN expression in response to pathogen infection.

Nieves Ayllón; Victoria Naranjo; Ondřej Hajdušek; Margarita Villar; Ruth C. Galindo; Katherine M. Kocan; Pilar Alberdi; Radek Sima; Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz; Claudia Rückert; Lesley Bell-Sakyi; Mária Kazimírová; Sabína Havlíková; Boris Klempa; Petr Kopáček; José de la Fuente

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Boris Klempa

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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José de la Fuente

Spanish National Research Council

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Nieves Ayllón

Spanish National Research Council

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Petr Kopáček

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Radek Sima

Charles University in Prague

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Margarita Villar

Spanish National Research Council

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Pilar Alberdi

Spanish National Research Council

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Victoria Naranjo

Spanish National Research Council

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