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1.
During metacyclogenesis of Leishmania in its sand fly vector, the parasite differentiates from a noninfective, procyclic form to an infective, metacyclic form, a process characterised by morphological changes of the parasite and also biochemical transformations in its major surface lipophosphoglycan (LPG). This lipid-anchored polysaccharide is polymorphic among species with variations in sugars that branch off the conserved Gal(beta1,4)Man(alpha1)-PO4 backbone of repeat units and the oligosaccharide cap. Lipophosphoglycan has been implicated as an adhesion molecule that mediates the interaction with the midgut epithelium of the sand fly in the subgenus Leishmania. This paper describes the LPG structure for the first time in a species from the subgenus Viannia, Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis. The LPG from the procyclic form of L. braziliensis was found to lack side chain sugar substitutions. In contrast to other species from the subgenus Leishmania, metacyclic forms of L. braziliensis makes less LPG and add 1-2 (beta1-3) glucose residues that branch off the disaccharide-phosphate repeat units of LPG. Thus, this represents a novel mechanism in the regulation of LPG structure during metacyclogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
At the end of their growth in the sand fly, Leishmania parasites differentiate into the infective metacyclic promastigote stage, which is transmitted to the mammalian host. Thus, in experimental studies of parasite infectivity toward animals or macrophages, the use of purified metacyclics is generally preferred. While metacyclics of several Leishmania species can be efficiently purified with the aid of lectins or monoclonal antibodies, which differentially exploit stage-specific differences in the structure of the abundant surface glycolipid lipophosphoglycan (LPG), such reagents are unavailable for most species and they are unsuitable for studies involving LPG-deficient mutants. Here we describe a simple density gradient centrifugation method, which allows the rapid purification of infective metacyclic parasites from both wild-type and LPG-deficient Leishmania major. The purified metacyclic promastigotes are authentic, as judged by criteria such as their morphology, expression of the metacyclic-specific gene SHERP, and ability to invade and replicate within macrophages in vitro. Preliminary studies suggest that this method is applicable to other Leishmania species including L. donovani.  相似文献   

3.
At key steps in the infectious cycle pathogens must adhere to target cells, but at other times detachment is required for transmission. During sand fly infections by the protozoan parasite Leishmania major, binding of replicating promastigotes is mediated by galactosyl side chain (scGal) modifications of phosphoglycan repeats of the major surface adhesin, lipophosphoglycan (LPG). Release is mediated by arabinosyl (Ara) capping of LPG scbetaGal residues upon differentiation to the infective metacyclic stage. We used intraspecific polymorphisms of LPG structure to develop a genetic strategy leading to the identification of two genes (SCA1/2) mediating scAra capping. These LPG side chain beta1,2-arabinosyltransferases (scbetaAraTs) exhibit canonical glycosyltransferase motifs, and their overexpression leads to elevated microsomal scbetaAraT activity. Although the level of scAra caps is maximal in metacyclic parasites, scbetaAraT activity is maximal in log phase cells. Because quantitative immunolocalization studies suggest this is not mediated by sequestration of SCA scbetaAraTs away from the Golgi apparatus during log phase, regulation of activated Ara precursors may control LPG arabinosylation in vivo. The SCA genes define a new family of eukaryotic betaAraTs and represent novel developmentally regulated LPG-modifying activities identified in Leishmania.  相似文献   

4.
The stage‐regulated HASPB and SHERP proteins of Leishmania major are predominantly expressed in cultured metacyclic parasites that are competent for macrophage uptake and survival. The role of these proteins in parasite development in the sand fly vector has not been explored, however. Here, we confirm that expression of HASPB is detected only in vector metacyclic stages, correlating with the expression of metacyclic‐specific lipophosphoglycan and providing the first definitive protein marker for this infective sand fly stage. Similarly, SHERP is expressed in vector metacyclics but is also detected at low levels in the preceding short promastigote stage. Using genetically modified parasites lacking or complemented for the LmcDNA16 locus on chromosome 23 that contains the HASP and SHERP genes, we further show that the presence of this locus is essential for parasite differentiation to the metacyclic stage in Phlebotomus papatasi. While wild‐type and complemented parasites transform normally in late‐stage infections, generating metacyclic promastigotes and colonizing the sand fly stomodeal valve, null parasites accumulate at the earlier elongated nectomonad stage of development within the abdominal and thoracic midgut of the sand fly. Complementation with HASPB or SHERP alone suggests that HASPB is the dominant effector molecule in this process.  相似文献   

5.
The life cycle of Leishmania alternates between two main morphological forms: intracellular amastigotes in the mammalian host and motile promastigotes in the sand fly vector. Several different forms of promastigote have been described in sandfly infections, the best known of these being metacyclic promastigotes, the mammal-infective stages. Here we provide evidence that for Leishmania (Leishmania) mexicana and Leishmania (Leishmania) infantum (syn. chagasi) there are two separate, consecutive growth cycles during development in Lutzomyia longipalpis sand flies involving four distinct life cycle stages. The first growth cycle is initiated by procyclic promastigotes, which divide in the bloodmeal in the abdominal midgut and subsequently give rise to non-dividing nectomonad promastigotes. Nectomonad forms are responsible for anterior migration of the infection and in turn transform into leptomonad promastigotes that initiate a second growth cycle in the anterior midgut. Subsequently, leptomonad promastigotes differentiate into non-dividing metacyclic promastigotes in preparation for transmission to a mammalian host. Differences in timing, prevalence and persistence of the four promastigote stages were observed between L. mexicana and L. infantum in vivo, which were reproduced in cultures initiated with lesion amastigotes, indicating that development is to some extent governed by a programmed series of events. A new scheme for the life cycle in the subgenus Leishmania (Leishmania) is proposed that incorporates these findings.  相似文献   

6.
Interspecies variations in lipophosphoglycan (LPG) have been the focus of intense study over the years due its role in specificity during sand fly-Leishmania interaction. This cell surface glycoconjugate is highly polymorphic among species with variations in sugars that branch off the conserved Gal(β1,4)Man(α1)-PO(4) backbone of repeat units. However, the degree of intraspecies polymorphism in LPG of Leishmania infantum (syn. Leishmania chagasi) is not known. In this study, intraspecific variation in the repeat units of LPG was evaluated in 16 strains of L. infantum from Brazil, France, Algeria and Tunisia. The structural polymorphism in the L. infantum LPG repeat units was relatively slight and consisted of three types: type I does not have side chains; type II has one β-glucose residue that branches off the disaccharide-phosphate repeat units and type III has up to three glucose residues (oligo-glucosylated). The significance of these modifications was investigated during in vivo interaction of L. infantum with Lutzomyia longipalpis, and in vitro interaction of the parasites and respective LPGs with murine macrophages. There were no consequential differences in the parasite densities in sand fly midguts infected with Leishmania strains exhibiting type I, II and III LPGs. However, higher nitric oxide production was observed in macrophages exposed to glucosylated type II LPG.  相似文献   

7.
A thorough understanding of the transmission mechanism of any infectious agent is crucial to implementing an effective intervention strategy. Here, our current understanding of the mechanisms that Leishmania parasites use to ensure their transmission from sand fly vectors by bite is reviewed. The most important mechanism is the creation of a "blocked fly" resulting from the secretion of promastigote secretory gel (PSG) by the parasites in the anterior midgut. This forces the sand fly to regurgitate PSG before it can bloodfeed, thereby depositing both PSG and infective metacyclic promastigotes in the skin of a mammalian host. Other possible factors in transmission are considered: damage to the stomodeal valve; occurrence of parasites in the salivary glands; and excretion of parasites from the anus of infected sand flies. Differences in the transmission mechanisms employed by parasites in the three subgenera, Leishmania, Viannia and Sauroleishmania are also addressed.  相似文献   

8.
Phlebotomine sand flies that transmit the protozoan parasite Leishmania differ greatly in their ability to support different parasite species or strains in the laboratory: while some show considerable selectivity, others are more permissive. In "selective" sand flies, Leishmania binding and survival in the fly midgut typically depends upon the abundant promastigote surface adhesin lipophosphoglycan (LPG), which exhibits species- and strain-specific modifications of the dominant phosphoglycan (PG) repeat units. For the "selective" fly Phlebotomus papatasi PpapJ, side chain galactosyl-modifications (scGal) of PG repeats play key roles in parasite binding. We probed the specificity and properties of this scGal-LPG PAMP (Pathogen Associated Molecular Pattern) through studies of natural isolates exhibiting a wide range of galactosylation patterns, and of a panel of isogenic L. major engineered to express similar scGal-LPG diversity by transfection of SCG-encoded β1,3-galactosyltransferases with different activities. Surprisingly, both 'poly-scGal' and 'null-scGal' lines survived poorly relative to PpapJ-sympatric L. major FV1 and other 'mono-scGal' lines. However, survival of all lines was equivalent in P. duboscqi, which naturally transmit L. major strains bearing 'null-scGal'-LPG PAMPs. We then asked whether scGal-LPG-mediated interactions were sufficient for PpapJ midgut survival by engineering Leishmania donovani, which normally express unsubstituted LPG, to express a 'PpapJ-optimal' scGal-LPG PAMP. Unexpectedly, these "L. major FV1-cloaked" L. donovani-SCG lines remained unable to survive within PpapJ flies. These studies establish that midgut survival of L. major in PpapJ flies is exquisitely sensitive to the scGal-LPG PAMP, requiring a specific 'mono-scGal' pattern. However, failure of 'mono-scGal' L. donovani-SCG lines to survive in selective PpapJ flies suggests a requirement for an additional, as yet unidentified L. major-specific parasite factor(s). The interplay of the LPG PAMP and additional factor(s) with sand fly midgut receptors may determine whether a given sand fly host is "selective" or "permissive", with important consequences to both disease transmission and the natural co-evolution of sand flies and Leishmania.  相似文献   

9.
In this work, we characterise metacyclic promastigotes of Leishmania amazonensis, the causative agent of cutaneous and diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis in the New World. To purify metacyclics from stationary culture by negative selection, we used the monoclonal antibody 3A1-La produced against procyclic promastigotes. The purified forms named 3A1-La(-) promastigotes, present key metacyclic characteristics: slender cell body and long flagella, ultrastructural features, resistance to complement lysis, high infectivity for macrophages and mice and reduced capacity for binding to the sand fly midgut. Moreover, the epitope recognised by 3A1-La is important for the promastigote attachment to the insect vector midgut epithelium. These results further characterise 3A1-La(-) promastigotes as metacyclic forms of L. amazonensis.  相似文献   

10.
To identify parameters of Leishmania infection within a population of infected sand flies that reliably predict subsequent transmission to the mammalian host, we sampled groups of infected flies and compared infection intensity and degree of metacyclogenesis with the frequency of transmission. The percentage of parasites within the midgut that were metacyclic promastigotes had the highest correlation with the frequency of transmission. Meta-analysis of multiple transmission experiments allowed us to establish a percent-metacyclic "cutoff" value that predicted transmission competence. Sand fly infections initiated with variable doses of parasites resulted in correspondingly altered percentages of metacyclic promastigotes, resulting in altered transmission frequency and disease severity. Lastly, alteration of sand fly oviposition status and environmental conditions at the time of transmission also influenced transmission frequency. These observations have implications for transmission of Leishmania by the sand fly vector in both the laboratory and in nature, including how the number of organisms acquired by the sand fly from an infection reservoir may influence the clinical outcome of infection following transmission by bite.  相似文献   

11.
Leishmania alternates between two main morphological forms in its life cycle: intracellular amastigotes in the mammalian host and motile promastigotes in the sandfly vector. Several different forms of promastigote can be recognised in sandfly infections. The first promastigote forms, which are found in the sandfly in the bloodmeal phase, are multiplicative procyclic promastigotes. These differentiate into nectomonad promastigotes, which are a non-dividing migratory stage moving from the posterior to the anterior midgut. When nectomonad promastigotes arrive at the anterior midgut they differentiate into leptomonad forms, a newly named life cycle stage, which resume replication. Leptomonad promastigotes, which are found in the anterior midgut, are the developmental precursors of the metacyclic promastigotes, the mammal-infective stages. Leptomonad forms also produce promastigote secretory gel, a substance that plays a key role in transmission by forming a physical obstruction in the gut, forcing the sandfly to regurgitate metacyclic promastigotes during bloodfeeding.  相似文献   

12.
Leishmaniasis is caused by a wide range of parasites that are transmitted by an even wider range of sand fly vectors. The phlebotomine vectors of Leishmaniasis are in some cases only permissive to the complete development of the species of Leishmania that they transmit in nature. The parasite–sand fly interactions that control this specificity are related to differences in the ability of the parasite to inhibit or to resist killing by proteolytic enzymes released into the mid-gut soon after blood feeding, and/or to maintain infection in the mid-gut during excretion of the digested blood meal. In each case, surface expressed or released phosphoglycan-containing molecules appear to promote parasite survival. The evidence that the surface lipophosphoglycan (LPG) mediates promastigote attachment to the mid-gut epithelium so as to prevent their loss during blood-meal excretion is especially strong based on the comparison of development in sand flies using LPG-deficient mutants. LPG displays interspecies polymorphisms in their phosphoglycan domains that in most cases can fully account for species-specific vector competence.  相似文献   

13.
Development of Leishmania parasites in the digestive tract of their sandfly vectors involves several morphological transformations from the intracellular mammalian amastigote via a succession of free and gut wall-attached promastigote stages to the infective metacyclic promastigotes. At the foregut midgut transition of Leishmania-infected sandflies a gel-like plug of unknown origin and composition is formed, which contains high numbers of parasites, that occludes the gut lumen and which may be responsible for the often observed inability of infected sandflies to draw blood. This "blocked fly" phenotype has been linked to efficient transmission of infectious metacyclic promastigotes from the vector to the mammalian host. We show by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy on two Leishmania/sandfly vector combinations (Leishmania mexicana/Lutzomyia longipalpis and L. major/Phlebotomus papatasi) that the gel-like mass is formed mainly by a parasite-derived mucin-like filamentous proteophosphoglycan (fPPG) whereas the Leishmania polymeric secreted acid phosphatase (SAP) is not a major component of this plug. fPPG forms a dense three-dimensional network of filaments which engulf the promastigote cell bodies in a gel-like mass. We propose that the continuous secretion of fPPG by promastigotes in the sandfly gut, that causes plug formation, is an important factor for the efficient transmission to the mammalian host.  相似文献   

14.
Female sand flies can acquire protozoan parasites in the genus Leishmania when feeding on an infected vertebrate host. The parasites complete a complex growth cycle in the sand fly gut until they are transmitted by bite to another host. Recently, a myoinhibitory peptide was isolated from Leishmania major promastigotes. This peptide caused significant gut distension and reversible, dose-dependent inhibition of spontaneous hindgut contractions in the enzootic sand fly vector, Phlebotomus papatasi. The current study further characterizes myoinhibitory activity in L. major and other kinetoplastid parasites, using the P. papatasi hindgut and other insect organ preparations. Myoinhibitory activity was greatest in cultured promastigotes and in culture medium in late log-phase and early stationary-phase, coinciding with development of infective Leishmania morphotypes in the sand fly midgut. L. major promastigote lysates inhibited spontaneous contractions of visceral muscle preparations from hemimetabolous (Blattaria and Hemiptera) and holometabolous (Diptera) insects. Inhibition of visceral muscle contractions in three insect orders indicates a conserved mode of action. Myoinhibitory activity was detected also in Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis, a Sudanese strain of Leishmania donovani, and the kinetoplastid parasite Leptomonas seymouri. Protozoan-induced myoinhibition mimics the effect of insect myotropins. Inhibiting host gut contractions protects Leishmania parasites from being excreted after blood meal and peritrophic matrix digestion, allowing development and transmission of infective forms.  相似文献   

15.

Background

The binding of Leishmania promastigotes to the midgut epithelium is regarded as an essential part of the life-cycle in the sand fly vector, enabling the parasites to persist beyond the initial blood meal phase and establish the infection. However, the precise nature of the promastigote stage(s) that mediate binding is not fully understood.

Methodology/Principal Findings

To address this issue we have developed an in vitro gut binding assay in which two promastigote populations are labelled with different fluorescent dyes and compete for binding to dissected sand fly midguts. Binding of procyclic, nectomonad, leptomonad and metacyclic promastigotes of Leishmania infantum and L. mexicana to the midguts of blood-fed, female Lutzomyia longipalpis was investigated. The results show that procyclic and metacyclic promastigotes do not bind to the midgut epithelium in significant numbers, whereas nectomonad and leptomonad promastigotes both bind strongly and in similar numbers. The assay was then used to compare the binding of a range of different parasite species (L. infantum, L. mexicana, L. braziliensis, L. major, L. tropica) to guts dissected from various sand flies (Lu. longipalpis, Phlebotomus papatasi, P. sergenti). The results of these comparisons were in many cases in line with expectations, the natural parasite binding most effectively to its natural vector, and no examples were found where a parasite was unable to bind to its natural vector. However, there were interesting exceptions: L. major and L. tropica being able to bind to Lu. longipalpis better than L. infantum; L. braziliensis was able to bind to P. papatasi as well as L. major; and significant binding of L. major to P. sergenti and L. tropica to P. papatasi was observed.

Conclusions/Significance

The results demonstrate that Leishmania gut binding is strictly stage-dependent, is a property of those forms found in the middle phase of development (nectomonad and leptomonad forms), but is absent in the early blood meal and final stages (procyclic and metacyclic forms). Further they show that although gut binding may be necessary for parasite establishment, in several vector-parasite pairs the specificity of such in vitro binding alone is insufficient to explain overall vector specificity. Other significant barriers to development must exist in certain refractory Leishmania parasite-sand fly vector combinations. A re-appraisal of the specificity of the Leishmania-sand fly relationship is required.  相似文献   

16.
Beverley SM  Dobson DE 《Cell》2004,119(3):311-312
In this issue, Kamhawi et al. (2004) describe the identification of an insect galectin as the receptor for the stage-specific Leishmania adhesin lipophosphoglycan (LPG). This interaction is critical for parasite survival in the midgut of its sand fly vector. The results open new avenues for studies of insect immunity, transmission binding vaccines, and host-parasite coevolution.  相似文献   

17.
Protozoan parasites of the genus Leishmania produce the novel surface glycoconjugate, lipophosphoglycan (LPG), which is required for parasite infectivity. In this study we show that LPG structure is modified during the differentiation of L. major promastigotes from a less infectious form in logarithmic growth phase to a highly infectious 'metacyclic' form during stationary growth phase. In both stages, the LPGs comprise linear chains of phosphorylated oligosaccharide repeat units which are anchored to the membrane via a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol glycolipid anchor. During metacyclogenesis there is (i) an approximate doubling in the average number of repeat units per molecule from 14 to 30, (ii) a pronounced decrease in the relative abundance of repeat units with side chains of beta Gal or Gal beta 1-3Gal beta 1-, and a corresponding increase in repeat units with either no side chains or with side chains of Arap alpha 1-2 Gal beta 1- and (iii) a decrease in the frequency with which the glycolipid anchor is substituted with a single glucose alpha 1-phosphate residue. While the majority of the LPG phosphoglycan chains are capped with the neutral disaccharide, Man alpha 1-2Man, a significant minority of the chains appeared to terminate in non-phosphorylated repeat units and may represent incompletely capped species. We suggest that the developmental modification of LPG may be important in modulating the binding of promastigotes to receptors in the sandfly midgut and on human macrophages and in increasing the resistance of metacyclic promastigotes to complement-mediated lysis.  相似文献   

18.
In this study we characterised metacyclogenesis in axenic culture of Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis, the causative agent of mucocutaneous leishmaniasis in the New World. Metacyclogenesis of other species of Leishmania has been shown by morphological changes as well as molecular modifications in the lipophosphoglycan, the major cell surface glycoconjugate of the promastigotes. In order to obtain metacyclic forms of L. braziliensis we tested a panel of different lectins. Our results showed that Bauhinia purpurea lectin facilitated the purification of metacyclic promastigotes from stationary-phase culture by negative selection. The B. purpurea non-agglutinated promastigotes had a slender short cell body and long flagella, typical of metacyclic morphology. The ultrastructural analysis showed that B. purpurea non-agglutinated promastigotes have a dense and thicker glycocalyx. They are resistant to complement lysis, and highly infective for macrophage in vitro and hamsters in vivo. Contrary to procyclic promastigotes, B. purpurea non-agglutinated forms were poorly recognised by sand fly gut epithelial cells. These results suggest that the B. purpurea non-agglutinated promastigotes are the metacyclic forms of L. braziliensis.  相似文献   

19.
Inoculation of Leishmania ( L.) spp. promastigotes in the dermis of mammals by blood-feeding sand flies can be accompanied by the rapid recruitment of neutrophils, inflammatory monocytes and dendritic cells. Despite the presence of these lytic leucocytes, parasitism is efficiently established. We show here that Leishmania donovani promastigotes are targeted to two different compartments in neutrophils. The compartments harbouring either damaged or non-damaged parasites were characterized at the electron microscopy (EM) level using the glucose 6-phosphatase cytochemistry and endosome–phagosome fusion assays. One involves the contribution of lysosomes leading to the formation of highly lytic compartments where parasites are rapidly degraded. The other is lysosome-independent and involves the contribution of a compartment displaying some features of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where parasites are protected from degradation. Using genetically modified parasites, we show that the promastigote surface lipophosphoglycan (LPG) is required to inhibit lysosome fusion and maintain parasites in neutrophil compartments displaying ER features. L. donovani -harbouring neutrophils that eventually enter apoptosis can be phagocytosed by macrophages enabling the stealth entry of parasites into their final replicative host cells. Thus, the ability of L. donovani to avoid trafficking into lysosomes-derived compartments in short-lived neutrophils constitutes a key process for the subsequent establishment of long-term parasitism.  相似文献   

20.
Leishmania express lipophosphoglycans and proteophosphoglycans that contain Galbeta1-4Manalpha1-P phosphosaccharide repeat structures assembled by the sequential addition of Manalpha1-P and betaGal. The synthetic acceptor substrate Galbeta1-4Manalpha1-P-decenyl and a series of analogues were used to probe Leishmania alpha-D-mannosyl phosphate transferase activity. We show that the activity detected with Galbeta1-4Manalpha1-P-decenyl is the elongating alpha-D-mannosyl phosphate transferase associated with lipophosphoglycan biosynthesis (eMPT(LPG)). Differences in the apparent K(m) values for the donor and acceptor substrates were found using L. major, L. mexicana, and L. donovani promastigote membranes, but total activity correlated with the number of lipophosphoglycan repeats. Further comparisons showed that lesion-derived L. mexicana amastigotes, that do not express lipophosphoglycan, lack eMPT(LPG) and that nondividing L. major metacyclic promastigotes contain 5-fold less eMPT(LPG) activity than dividing procyclic promastigotes. The fine specificity of promastigote eMPT(LPG) activity was determined using 24 synthetic analogues of Galbeta1-4Manalpha1-P-decenyl. The three species gave similar results: the negative charge of the phosphodiester and the C-6 hydroxyl of the alphaMan residue are essential for substrate recognition, the latter most likely acting as a hydrogen bond acceptor. The C-6' hydroxyl of the betaGal residue is required for substrate recognition as well as for catalysis. The rate of Manalpha1-P transfer declines with increasing acceptor substrate chain length. The presence of a monosaccharide substituent at the C-3 position of the terminal betaGal residue abrogates Man-P transfer, showing that chain elongation must precede side chain modification during lipophosphoglycan biosynthesis. In contrast, substitution of the penultimate phosphosaccharide repeat does not abrogate transfer but is slightly stimulatory in L. mexicana and inhibitory in L. major.  相似文献   

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