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1.
The flagellar attachment zone (FAZ) is an adhesion region of Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigote forms where the flagellum emerges from the flagellar pocket and remains attached to the cell body. This region shows a junctional complex which is formed by a linear series of apposed macular structures that are separated by amorphous material and clusters of intramembranous particles. Two protein groups appear to be important in the FAZ region: a membrane glycoprotein of 72kDa and several high molecular weight proteins. To gain a better understanding of the FAZ region, we compared wild-type Y strain T. cruzi epimastigotes with a mutant cell in which the 72-kDa surface glycoprotein (Gp72), involved in cell body-flagellum adhesion, had been deleted by target gene replacement. Using immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and electron microscopy techniques to analyze the FAZ region the results suggest that, in the absence of Gp72, other proteins involved in the formation of FAZ remain concentrated in the flagellar pocket region. The analysis of a 3-D reconstruction model of wild-type epimastigotes showed that the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrion are in intimate association with FAZ, in contrast to the null mutant cells where the endoplasmic reticulum was not visualized.  相似文献   

2.
The fine structure of the epimastigotes of Trypanosoma cyclops maintained in blood agar medium at 25 C is described. This organism was isolated from the Malaysian primates Macaca nemestrina and Macaca ira. A distinctive feature of T. cyclops is that it is pigmented when grown in the presence of hemoglobin. The pigment bodies apparently lack a substructure and are electron dense even in unstained sections. Most of the pigment is located posterior to the kinetoplast region but some is found adjacent and anterior to the kinetoplast. Cells from control cultures grown in medium lacking hemoglobin did not possess this type of pigment body. Similarly, pigment was not found in cells of an Indonesian trypanosome grown in medium containing hemoglobin. The cytoplasm of T. cyclops is bounded by a unit membrane which is specialized where it makes contact with the flagellum. A cytostome extends from the region of the flagellar pocket. The kinetoplast and nucleus are immediately posterior to the base of the flagellum. Transverse sections in the region of the flagellar pocket and flagellar base often reveal a group of 3 microtubules which are distinct from the pellicular microtubules.  相似文献   

3.
Clathrin is a scaffold protein found in different types of coated vesicles in most eukaryotic cells. Major forces that drive clathrin coat formation are the adaptor protein complexes. Trypanosoma cruzi is a flagellate protozoan that ingests macromolecules through receptor-mediated endocytosis, but the molecules involved in this process are still poorly known. Bioinformatics was used to identify proteins in the T. cruzi genome database, permitting discrimination of the genes involved in clathrin coat assembly. Clathrin expression was demonstrated in T. cruzi epimastigotes by using several experimental approaches. Western blot analysis showed a single 180-kDa protein band, which corresponds to the molecular mass of mammalian clathrin heavy chain. A flow cytometry assay demonstrated that the clathrin heavy chain was expressed in 97.74% of the cell population analyzed, with a high-fluorescence signal. Immunofluorescence observation showed labeling clustered at the flagellar pocket and Golgi complex region. Coated vesicles budding off from the flagellar pocket and the trans Golgi network membranes were identified by transmission electron microscopy. Our data demonstrate the expression of clathrin in T. cruzi epimastigotes and show the association of this polypeptide with the parasite endocytic and exocytic pathways.  相似文献   

4.
Cytoskeletal components were visualized in epimastigote forms of Trypanosoma cruzi by double immunofluorescence microscopy using monospecific antibodies against tubulin and against actin. Intense staining of the flagellum and the edges of the cell body was observed when the cells were stained with anti-tubulin, reflecting the presence of the basal bodies, the flagellar axoneme and the subpellicular microtubules. A less intense staining was seen in the cell body of epimastigotes stained with anti-actin. However, an intense staining was observed with this antibody in the flagellum, in a pattern similar to that observed with anti-tubulin. It is suggested that the paraxial structure, which is formed by a complex array of 6-nm-thick microfilaments is composed, at least in part, of actin.  相似文献   

5.
The replication and segregation of organelles producing two identical daughter cells must be precisely controlled during the cell cycle progression of eukaryotes. In kinetoplastid flagellated protozoa, this includes the duplication of the single mitochondrion containing a network of DNA, known as the kinetoplast, and a flagellum that grows from a cytoplasmic basal body through the flagellar pocket compartment before emerging from the cell. Here, we show the morphological events and the timing of these events during the cell cycle of the epimastigote form of Trypanosoma cruzi, the protozoan parasite that causes Chagas' disease. DNA staining, flagellum labeling, bromodeoxyuridine incorporation, and ultra-thin serial sections show that nuclear replication takes 10% of the whole cell cycle time. In the middle of the G2 stage, the new flagellum emerges from the flagellar pocket and grows unattached to the cell body. While the new flagellum is still short, the kinetoplast segregates and mitosis occurs. The new flagellum reaches its final size during cytokinesis when a new cell body is formed. These precisely coordinated cell cycle events conserve the epimastigote morphology with a single nucleus, a single kinetoplast, and a single flagellum status of the interphasic cell.  相似文献   

6.
High resolution scanning electron microscopy was used to analyze the surface of epimastigote, amastigote and trypomastigote forms of Trypanosoma cruzi. Significant differences were observed between these forms and in different areas of the same cell. The cytostome found in amastigote and epimastigote forms could be easily visualized in images, which resemble those obtained only using the freeze-fracture technique. In contrast to other areas of the cell surface, the region of the cytostome, localized close to the flagellar pocket, showed a rugous surface and an opening with a diameter of 90 nm. Gold-labeled concanavalin A binds to the whole cell surface. However, the extent of binding was much higher in the region of the cytostome. The results obtained show that high resolution scanning electron microscopy is a powerful technique for analyzing the surface of protozoa.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Ultrastructural localization of basic proteins in Trypanosoma cruzi.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The postformalin ammoniacal silver (AS) and the ethanolic phosphotungstic acid (EPTA) techniques were applied in epimastigote and trypomastigote forms of the pathogenic protozoa Trypanosoma cruzi to detect basic proteins at the ultrastructural level. With both techniques, reaction was observed in the nucleus and in some cytoplasmic vacuoles. In the kinetoplast of epimastigotes, reaction was observed only at its periphery. In trypomastigotes, however, an intense reaction was observed in the spherical kinetoplast. With the ethanolic phosphotungstic acid technique, reaction was also observed in ribosomes and at the peripheral doublet microtubules of the flagellum. The filaments which form the paraflagellar structure did not react.  相似文献   

9.
The flagellar pocket and the cytostome are surface domains of Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigote involved in acquisition of nutrients. The cytostome is physically connected to the flagellar complex. To investigate if this association plays a role in endocytosis in T. cruzi, the endocytic activity in wild type and gp72 null mutant (flagellum-cell body attachment region is absent) epimastigotes was compared. Both wild type and mutant cells were incubated with transferrin conjugated with Alexa 543 or gold particles over different time periods and thereafter qualitatively and quantitatively analyzed by flow cytometry and transmission electron microscopy. Flow cytometry analysis showed a reduction in transferrin uptake by null mutant after 30 min of incubation. In addition, at this time period, signals detected by fluorescence microscopy were slightly lower in null mutant cells. At lower incubation times, no differences between wild type and mutant epimastigotes could be observed. Quantitative data obtained by morphometric and flow cytometry analysis suggested that the speed of the endocytic process in the null mutant was similar to wild type cells, although null mutants were not able to bind cargo and therefore internalize as much as wild type epimastigotes. Our observations suggest that the physical association between cytostome and the flagellar complex plays a role in endocytosis efficiency by epimastigotes of T. cruzi.  相似文献   

10.
One predominant 55-kDa polypeptide was phosphorylated in vitro in Trypanosoma cruzi homogenates prepared from three differentiation stages: epimastigotes, trypomastigotes, and spheromastigotes. Anti-alpha and anti-beta tubulin monoclonal antibodies immunoprecipitated the phosphorylated 55-kDa polypeptide from epimastigote extracts. Phosphoserine was the only residue phosphorylated in vitro in the 55-kDa polypeptide and in immunoprecipitated alpha tubulin. The phosphorylation of both the 55-kDa polypeptide and exogenously added casein was inhibited with GTP, heparin, and 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate in a dose-dependent manner, indicating the involvement of a CK2-like protein kinase. Moreover, when tubulin was isolated from an epimastigote homogenate by ultracentrifugation, followed by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography, a protein kinase that phosphorylated tubulin and casein co-purified with this cytoskeletal component. This result suggests an association between tubulin and its corresponding protein kinase in T. cruzi.  相似文献   

11.
It has been known for many years that trypanosomatids require exogenous essential growth factors in order to divide. Two surface domains are involved in starting nutrient endocytosis: the flagellar pocket and the cytostome. Although the flagellar pocket plays a fundamental role in the endocytic process occurring in several trypanosomatids, we have shown the cytostome as the main structure involved in this process in epimastigote forms of T. cruzi. After one minute of endocytosis, cargo is still found at the cytostome entry as well as along the cytopharynx. After two, five and fifteen minutes of endocytosis, cargo was seen inside vesicles and tubules, prior to fusing with reservosomes. Three-dimensional reconstruction of these tubules and vesicles showed they are interconnected, forming an intricate and branched network, distributed from the perinuclear region to the posterior end of the cell. Whole unfixed parasites that had taken up gold-protein conjugates for fifteen minutes were washed and dried on electron microscope grids. Observation with an energy-filtering transmission electron microscope revealed long gold-filled tubules at the posterior end of the cell. Parasites treated with ammonium chloride had their intracellular traffic slowed down, which allowed us to observe many events of vesicle fusion. The acidic nature of this network was evidenced using acridine orange. Based on pH and protein uptake kinetics we propose that the vesicular-tubular network is the early endosome of Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes.  相似文献   

12.
SYNOPSIS. In the culture forms of the elasmobranch trypanosome Trypanosoma raiae is found a prominent cytopharyngeal complex. This consists of a group of 5 or 6 microtubules associated with a deep invagination of the cell membrane which arises from a cytostome near the opening of the flagellar pocket. This structure is a constant feature of the various epimastigote and trypomastigote forms that this flagellate has in culture. Replication of the cytopharyngeal apparatus is completed before cytokinesis.
Experiments using ferritin as an electron dense tracer show that endocytosis occurs from the blind ending of the cytopharynx both in the exponential and stationary phases of growth in vitro. Ferritin is transported from the cytopharynx by endocytotic vesicles to large, membrane-bound vacuoles in the posterior region of the cell. Ultrastructural location of non-specific acid phosphatase within these digestive vacuoles and also within the Golgi apparatus is reported.
Coated vesicles found in association with the flagellar pocket are another route of uptake of ferritin by T. raiae.  相似文献   

13.
Phytomonas serpens , a phytoflagellate trypanosomatid, shares common antigens with Trypanosoma cruzi . In the present work, we compared the hydrolytic capability of cysteine peptidases in both trypanosomatids. Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes presented a 10-fold higher efficiency in hydrolyzing the cysteine peptidase substrate Z-Phe-Arg-AMC than P. serpens promastigotes. Moreover, two weak cysteine-type gelatinolytic activities were detected in P. serpens , while a strong 50-kDa cysteine peptidase was observed in T. cruzi . Cysteine peptidase activities were detected at twofold higher levels in the cytoplasmic fraction when compared with the membrane-rich or the content released from P. serpens . The cysteine peptidase secreted by P. serpens cleaved several proteinaceous substrates. Corroborating these findings, the cellular distribution of the cruzipain-like molecules in P. serpens was attested through immunocytochemistry analysis. Gold particles were observed in all cellular compartments, including the cytoplasm, plasma membrane, flagellum, flagellar membrane and flagellar pocket. Interestingly, some gold particles were visualized free in the flagellar pocket, suggesting the release of the cruzipain-like molecule. The antigenic properties of the cruzipain-like molecules of P. serpens were also analyzed. Interestingly, sera from chagasic patients recognized both cellular and extracellular antigens of P. serpens , including the cruzipain-like molecule. These results point to the use of P. serpens antigens, especially the cruzipain-like cysteine-peptidases, as an alternative vaccination approach to T. cruzi infection.  相似文献   

14.
A new cryptobiid flagellates, Cryptobia udonellae sp. n., is described from the excretory channels of Udonella murmanica. The body of flagellates is spindle-shaped. The flagellar pocket is subapical. Two flagella emerge from the pocket. One flagellum turns anterior and is forward-directed; the other flagellum is directed posterior and close to the ventral cell surface. The ventral groove is well developed. The cytostome opens just anterior to the flagellar pocket. The cytostome leads to the short cytopharynx. In the excretory channel of worms the flagellates C. udonellae sp. n. are attached to microvilli of epithelium or lay free in the lumen. Both flagellates have been studied with TEM. The unusual parasite system which involves organisms of four different phylums of animals has been described for the first time.  相似文献   

15.
Reactivity of different Trypanosoma cruzi developmental forms with purified Chagasic anti-α-galactosyl antibodies (anti-Gal) was studied using epimastigotes from axenic cultures, trypomastigotes and amastigotes from infected Vero cell cultures, and an immunogold labeling method as observed by electron microscopy. Epimastigotes were poorly labeled, whereas extracellular trypomastigotes and amastigotes bound heterogeneously to the antibody with many cells being intensely labeled at the cell surface, including the membrane lining the cell body, the flagellum and the flagellar pocket. Parasites with poor labeling at the cell surface generally had several gold particles within the cell, mostly in cytoplasmic vacuoles. The Golgi complex of trypomastigotes was strongly labeled. Intracellular parasites were labeled at the parasite cell surface or within vacuolar structures. The expression in T. cruzi -infected Vero cells of α-galactosyl antigenic structures acquired from the parasite was shown by moderate labeling with Chagasic anti-Gal of the membrane lining parasite-free outward cell projections. The reactivity with purified anti-Gal from healthy individuals at the same concentrations of Chagasic anti-Gal was poor, with gold particles appearing in the nucleus and cytoplasm but not at the cell surface. It paralleled the labeling with Bandeireae simplicifolia IB-4 lectin. The results provide a basis for autoimmune reactions involving anti-Gal from chronic Chagasic patients.  相似文献   

16.
The ethanolic phosphotungstic acid (PTA) technic was used to detect, at the fine-structural level, basic proteins in various developmental stages of pathogenic Trypanosoma cruzi, and nonpathogenic Herpetomonas samuelpessoai, Leptomonas samueli, and Crithidia deanei, trypanosomatids. Reactions were observed in the nucleus of all stages. In the kinetoplast of epimastigote and promastigote forms reactions were noted mainly at the periphery. In trypomastigotes and choanomastigotes forms, however, an intense reacion was observed thorughout the kinetoplast. Reactions were present in cytoplasmic vesicles related to protein storage in T. cruzi and in membrane-bounded peroxisome-like organelles of H. samuelpessoai, L. samueli and C. deanei. The network of filaments which forms the paraxial rod did not react. In the flagellum, reaction was noted only at the peripheral doublet microtubules. PTA reacts also with structures related to the junction between the flagellar and cell body membranes.  相似文献   

17.
Null mutants of the Trypanosoma cruzi insect stage-specific glycoprotein GP72 were created by targeted gene replacement. Targeting plasmids were constructed in which the neomycin phosphotransferase and hygromycin phosphotransferase genes were flanked by GP72 sequences. These plasmids were sequentially transfected into T. cruzi epimastigotes by electroporation. Southern blot analyzes indicated that precise replacement of the two genes had occurred. No aberrant rearrangements occurred at the GP72 locus and no GP72 gene sequences had been translocated elsewhere in the genome. Western blots confirmed that GP72 is not expressed in these null mutants. The morphology of the mutants is dramatically different from wild-type. In both mutant and wild-type parasites, the flagellum emerges from the flagellar pocket. In the null mutant the normal attachment of the flagellum to the cell membrane of the parasite is lost.  相似文献   

18.
Epimastigotes and trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi, obtained from liquid cultures, have vesicles and multivesicular structures in their cytoplasm. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used as a tracer to study the uptake of protein by these two forms. In epimastogotes HRP is ingested by a process of pinocytosis which occurs through the cytostome. Trypomastigotes do not have a cytostome, and pinocytosis occurs through the flagellar pocket region. The pinocytotic vesicles can fuse with each other to form large multivesicular structures that are more abundant in epimastigotes than in trypomastigotes. The cell membrane as well as the membranes of the pinocytotic vesicles and the large multivesicular structure have carbohydrates, as detected by the periodic acid-thiosemicarbazide-silver proteinate technique. Intramembranous particles were observed by using the freeze-fracture technique. The cell membrane has many particles, whereas the membranes of the vesicles and multivesicular structure have few or no particles.  相似文献   

19.
W. Herth 《Protoplasma》1982,112(1-2):17-25
Summary The chrysoflagellate algaPoterioochromonas bears two unequal flagella. There is a short naked one and a long flagellum with mastigonemes. Ultrastructural investigation reveals that the centralpair microtubules in both flagella have no fixed position with respect to the flagellar base and root system, or the mastigoneme rows in the long flagellum. The central-pair microtubules are twisted several times along the length of the flagellum. This might indicate active or passive rotation of the central-pair microtubules during flagellar beat.  相似文献   

20.
M A Farmer  R E Triemer 《Bio Systems》1988,21(3-4):283-291
The flagellar apparatus of euglenoids consists of two functional basal bodies, three unequal microtubular roots subtending the reservoir, and a fourth band of microtubules nucleated from one of the flagellar roots and subtending the reservoir membrane. The flagellar apparatus of some euglenoids may contain additional basal bodies, striated roots ("rhizoplasts"), fibrous roots, striated connecting fibers between basal bodies, layered structures, or various electron-dense connective substances. With the possible exception of Petalomonas cantuscygni, nearly all euglenoids are biflagellate although the length of one flagellum may be highly reduced. The flagellar transition zone and number of basal bodies are highly variable among species. In recent years a cytoplasmic pocket that branches off from the reservoir has been discovered. The microtubules of the ventral flagellar root are continuous with the microtubules which line this pocket. Based on positional and structural similarities, this structure is believed to be homologous with the MTR/cytostome of bodonids. Coupled with other ultrastructural and biochemical data, the fine structure of the flagellar apparatus supports the belief that the euglenoid flagellates are descendant from bodonid ancestors.  相似文献   

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