首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 734 毫秒
1.
The peritrophic membrane (pm) of teneral female tsetse flies, Glossina morsitans morsitans, did not extend to the full length of the midgut 1-12 hr after emergence. The ingested blood did not reach the posterior part of the midgut (p-part), and the crop still contained food 12 hr after feeding. In these flies, the p-part contained the remains of the larval gut, the meconium, and bacteria. Ferritin molecules fed to tsetse females together with human serum were only found in the endoperitrophic space of the gut. This electron-dense tracer did not penetrate and cross the pm. On the other hand, ingested peroxidase passed the pm, and was transported through intercellular clefts, the basal labyrinth and the basal lamina to the hemolymph. This uptake was observed in the anterior part and to a smaller extent in the middle part of the midgut within 2 hr after feeding. Peroxidase was incorporated from the hemolymph into fat body cells, where it was found 2 hr and later after feeding. Pinocytosis of the tracer molecules, as an additional intracellular pathway to the intercellular route of transport, could not be demonstrated.  相似文献   

2.
When fed in semi-artificial diet in short- and long-term bioassays, the lectins from snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis; GNA) and jackbean (Canavalia ensiformis; Con A) affected the activities of soluble and brush border membrane (BBM) enzymes in the midgut of Lacanobia oleracea larvae. In the short term both lectins increased gut protein levels and BBM aminopeptidase activity. The lectins also increased trypsin activity, both in the gut (Con A) and in the faeces (GNA). GNA also increased the activity of alpha-glucosidase, but neither lectin had a significant effect on alkaline phosphatase activity. Trypsin mRNA levels were similar in lectin-fed and control larvae in the short term, showing that there is no direct effect on expression of the encoding genes. Larvae chronically exposed to GNA and Con A showed reductions in weight of 50-60%, and exhibited a significant reduction in alpha-glucosidase activity, but little change in other enzyme activities. Con A bound to many BBM and peritrophic matrix (PM) proteins in vitro, whereas GNA showed more specific binding, with strongest binding to a 94kDa uncharacterised BBM protein. Both lectins accumulated in gut tissues of insects after chronic exposure in vivo, but Con A was present at higher levels than GNA.  相似文献   

3.
Chitinase secreted by Leishmania functions in the sandfly vector.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Leishmania major parasites ingested with host blood by the sandfly Phlebotomus papatasi multiply confined within the peritrophic membrane. This membrane consists of a chitin framework and a protein carbohydrate matrix and it is secreted around the food by the insect midgut. Histological sections of infected flies show lysis of the chitin layer in the anterior region of the peritrophic membrane that permits the essential forward migration of a concentrated mass of parasites. Both the location and the nature of this disintegration are specific to infected flies. At a later stage the parasites concentrate in the cardiac valve region and subsequently this segment of the fore gut loses its cuticular lining. We have found that chitinase and N-acetylglucosaminidase are secreted by cultured L. major promastigotes, but not by sandfly guts. Hence lysis of the chitin layer of the peritrophic membrane could be catalysed by these enzymes of the parasites. Activity of both enzymes was also observed in other trypanosomatids, including L. donovani, L. infantum, L. braziliensis, Leptomonas seymouri, Crithidia fasciculata and Trypanosoma lewisi.  相似文献   

4.
Tsetse flies (Glossina spp.) vector pathogenic African trypanosomes, which cause sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in domesticated animals. Additionally, tsetse harbors 3 maternally transmitted endosymbiotic bacteria that modulate their host''s physiology. Tsetse is highly resistant to infection with trypanosomes, and this phenotype depends on multiple physiological factors at the time of challenge. These factors include host age, density of maternally-derived trypanolytic effector molecules present in the gut, and symbiont status during development. In this study, we investigated the molecular mechanisms that result in tsetse''s resistance to trypanosomes. We found that following parasite challenge, young susceptible tsetse present a highly attenuated immune response. In contrast, mature refractory flies express higher levels of genes associated with humoral (attacin and pgrp-lb) and epithelial (inducible nitric oxide synthase and dual oxidase) immunity. Additionally, we discovered that tsetse must harbor its endogenous microbiome during intrauterine larval development in order to present a parasite refractory phenotype during adulthood. Interestingly, mature aposymbiotic flies (Gmm Apo) present a strong immune response earlier in the infection process than do WT flies that harbor symbiotic bacteria throughout their entire lifecycle. However, this early response fails to confer significant resistance to trypanosomes. Gmm Apo adults present a structurally compromised peritrophic matrix (PM), which lines the fly midgut and serves as a physical barrier that separates luminal contents from immune responsive epithelial cells. We propose that the early immune response we observe in Gmm Apo flies following parasite challenge results from the premature exposure of gut epithelia to parasite-derived immunogens in the absence of a robust PM. Thus, tsetse''s PM appears to regulate the timing of host immune induction following parasite challenge. Our results document a novel finding, which is the existence of a positive correlation between tsetse''s larval microbiome and the integrity of the emerging adult PM gut immune barrier.  相似文献   

5.
For the first time a sugar receptor (lectin) has been localized by electron microscopy in an invertebrate. The peritrophic membrane of the blowfly larva, Calliphora erythrocephala, is shown here to express lectins with high specificity for mannose. The lectin is restricted to the lumen side of the peritrophic membrane. The surface of the midgut epithelium is devoid of mannose-specific lectins. It is suggested that the midgut epithelium has lost these lectins during the course of evolution in favour of the peritrophic membrane which is secreted by specialized cells only at the beginning of the midgut.Peritrophic membranes and the midgut epithelium lack lectins specific for galactose. The lumen side of the peritrophic membrane of the larvae has mannose and/or glucose residues, and it is densely packed with two species of bacteria, Proteus vulgaris and P. morganii. These also have mannose-specific lectins as well as mannose residues on their pili. The existence of mannose-specific receptors and mannose residues on both, peritrophic membranes and bacteria, leads to the assumption of mutual adherence between the two surfaces.  相似文献   

6.
African trypanosomes live in the lumen of the gut of tsetse (Glossina) and may have to face an immune response. As yet, it is unclear whether they are sensitive to antimicrobial peptides in vivo, but for some years there has been indirect evidence that one or more lectins can influence the infection. We have purified a protein complex from midgut extracts that, by SDS-PAGE, is a doublet of 37 and 38 kDa in a ratio of 3:1. Through prediction from corresponding cDNA clones, the full-length protein (tsetseEP) contains 320 amino acids, including a signal peptide. There is apparently only one gene encoding this protein. Towards the C terminus, the protein contains a run of 59 (EP) repeats, which surprisingly is what comprises almost the entire mature EP procyclin molecule present on the surface of trypanosomes in the tsetse gut. Drosophila contains a number of genes encoding proteins, of unknown function, with the same cysteine pattern as tsetseEP; this pattern is not reported for any other protein. Immunoblotting with a monoclonal antibody against (EP) repeats reveals expression in the gut, but not salivary glands, of female and male flies, whether or not fed. Immunoelectron microscopy shows the presence in vesicles in midgut cells and in the lumen of the gut. Attempts to demonstrate lectin activity were thwarted by limited availability of the protein complex.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract Teneral Glossina morsitans mositans, G.m.submorsitans, G.palpalis gambiensis and G.tachinoides were allowed to feed on rabbits infected with Trypanosoma congolense savannah type or on mice infected with T.congolense riverine-forest type. The four tsetse species and subspecies were also infected simultaneously in vitro on the blood of mice infected with the two clones of T.congolense via a silicone membrane. The infected tsetse were maintained on rabbits and from the day 25 after the infective feed, the surviving tsetse were dissected in order to determine the infection rates.
Results showed higher mature infection rates in morsitans-gwup tsetse flies than in palpalis-group tsetse flies when infected with the savannah type of T.congolense. In contrast, infection rates with the riverine-forest type of T.congolense were lower, and fewer flies showed full development cycle. The intrinsec vectorial capacity of G.m.submorsitans for the two T.congolense types was the highest, whereas the intrinsic vectorial capacity of G.p.gambiensis for the Savannah type and G.m.morsitans for the riverine-forest type were the lowest. Among all tsetse which were infected simultaneously with the two types of T.congolense , the polymerase chain reaction detected only five flies which had both trypanosome taxa in the midgut and the proboscis. All the other infections were attributable to the savannah type.
The differences in the gut of different Glossina species and subspecies allowing these two sub-groups of T.congolense to survive better and undergo the complete developmental cycle more readily in some species than other are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Transmission of vector-borne diseases depends largely on the ability of the insect vector to become infected with the parasite. In tsetse flies, newly emerged or teneral flies are considered the most likely to develop a mature, infective trypanosome infection. This was confirmed during experimental infections where laboratory-reared Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood (Diptera: Glossinidae) were infected with Trypanosoma congolense or T. brucei brucei. The ability of mature adult tsetse flies to become infected with trypanosomes was significantly lower than that of newly emerged flies for both parasites. However, the nutritional status of the tsetse at the time of the infective bloodmeal affected its ability to acquire either a T. congolense or T. b. brucei infection. Indeed, an extreme period of starvation (3-4 days for teneral flies, 7 days for adult flies) lowers the developmental barrier for a trypanosome infection, especially at the midgut level of the tsetse fly. Adult G. m. morsitans became at least as susceptible as newly emerged flies to infection with T. congolense. Moreover, the susceptibility of adult flies, starved for 7 days, to an infection with T. b. brucei was also significantly increased, but only at the level of maturation of an established midgut infection to a salivary gland infection. The outcome of these experimental infections clearly suggests that, under natural conditions, nutritional stress in adult tsetse flies could contribute substantially to the epidemiology of tsetse-transmitted trypanosomiasis.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Tsetse flies serve as biological vectors for several species of African trypanosomes. In order to survive, proliferate and establish a midgut infection, trypanosomes must cross the tsetse fly peritrophic matrix (PM), which is an acellular gut lining surrounding the blood meal. Crossing of this multi-layered structure occurs at least twice during parasite migration and development, but the mechanism of how trypanosomes do so is not understood. In order to better comprehend the molecular events surrounding trypanosome penetration of the tsetse PM, a mass spectrometry-based approach was applied to investigate the PM protein composition using Glossina morsitans morsitans as a model organism.

Methods

PMs from male teneral (young, unfed) flies were dissected, solubilised in urea/SDS buffer and the proteins precipitated with cold acetone/TCA. The PM proteins were either subjected to an in-solution tryptic digestion or fractionated on 1D SDS-PAGE, and the resulting bands digested using trypsin. The tryptic fragments from both preparations were purified and analysed by LC-MS/MS.

Results

Overall, nearly 300 proteins were identified from both analyses, several of those containing signature Chitin Binding Domains (CBD), including novel peritrophins and peritrophin-like glycoproteins, which are essential in maintaining PM architecture and may act as trypanosome adhesins. Furthermore, 27 proteins from the tsetse secondary endosymbiont, Sodalis glossinidius, were also identified, suggesting this bacterium is probably in close association with the tsetse PM.

Conclusion

To our knowledge this is the first report on the protein composition of teneral G. m. morsitans, an important vector of African trypanosomes. Further functional analyses of these proteins will lead to a better understanding of the tsetse physiology and may help identify potential molecular targets to block trypanosome development within the tsetse.  相似文献   

10.
Tsetse-transmitted trypanosomiasis poses a serious threat to human and animal health in sub-Saharan Africa. The majority of tsetse flies ( Glossina spp.) in a natural population will not develop a mature infection of either Trypanosoma congolense or Trypanosoma brucei sp. because of refractoriness, a phenomenon that is affected by different factors, including the tsetse fly's immune defence. Starvation of tsetse flies significantly increases their susceptibility to the establishment of a trypanosome infection. This paper reports the effects of nutritional stress (starvation) on (a) uninduced baseline levels of gene expression of the antimicrobial peptides attacin, defensin and cecropin in the tsetse fly, and (b) levels of expression induced in response to bacterial ( Escherichia coli ) or trypanosomal challenge. In newly emerged, unfed tsetse flies, starvation significantly lowers baseline levels of antimicrobial peptide gene expression, especially for attacin and cecropin. In response to trypanosome challenge, only non-starved older flies showed a significant increase in antimicrobial peptide gene expression within 5 days of ingestion of a trypanosome-containing bloodmeal, especially with T. brucei bloodstream forms. These data suggest that a decreased expression of immune genes in newly hatched flies or a lack of immune responsiveness to trypanosomes in older flies, both occurring as a result of fly starvation, may be among the factors contributing to the increased susceptibility of nutritionally stressed tsetse flies to trypanosome infection.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
EP and GPEET procyclin, the major surface glycoproteins of procyclic forms of Trypanosoma brucei, are truncated by proteases in the midgut of the tsetse fly Glossina morsitans morsitans. We show that soluble extracts from the midguts of teneral flies contain trypsin-like enzymes that cleave the N-terminal domains from living culture-derived parasites. The same extract shows little activity against a variant surface glycoprotein on living bloodstream form T. brucei (MITat 1.2) and none against glutamic acid/alanine-rich protein, a major surface glycoprotein of Trypanosoma congolense insect forms although both these proteins contain potential trypsin cleavage sites. Gel filtration of tsetse midgut extract revealed three peaks of tryptic activity against procyclins. Trypsin alone would be sufficient to account for the cleavage of GPEET at a single arginine residue in the fly. In contrast, the processing of EP at multiple sites would require additional enzymes that might only be induced or activated during feeding or infection. Unexpectedly, the pH optima for both the procyclin cleavage reaction and digestion of the trypsin-specific synthetic substrate Chromozym-TRY were extremely alkaline (pH 10). Direct measurements were made of the pH within different compartments of the tsetse digestive tract. We conclude that the gut pH of teneral flies, from the proventriculus to the hindgut, is alkaline, in contradiction to previous measurements indicating that it was mildly acidic. When tsetse flies were analysed 48 h after their first bloodmeal, a pH gradient from the proventriculus (pH 10.6+/-0.6) to the posterior midgut (pH 7.9+/-0.4) was observed.  相似文献   

14.
The diurnal activity patterns, trypanosome infection rates and movement of Glossinafuscipesfuscipes (Diptera: Glossinidae) were investigated in Buvuma Island, Lake Victoria, Uganda. Hourly trapping of tsetse flies was undertaken to determine their activity rhythm while a capture-mark-release-recapture method was conducted to assess the movement and dispersal of tsetse flies between lakeshore, hinterland and further inland sites along a transected area. Dissection of tsetse flies was also undertaken to determine the trypanosome infection rates in salivary glands, proboscis and mid-gut. Results indicated a bimodal diurnal activity profile for G. f fuscipes on the Island, both on the lakeshore and in the hinterland. Movement and dispersal of G. f fuscipes tsetse flies occurred between lakeshore, hinterland and further inland sites with a greater tendency of flies to move to the lakeshore. Trypanosome infection rates of 4.32% for Trypasoma vivax and 1.15% for 7. congolense were found in G. f. fuscipes.  相似文献   

15.
Many bacteria successfully colonize animals by forming protective biofilms. Molecular processes that underlie the formation and function of biofilms in pathogenic bacteria are well characterized. In contrast, the relationship between biofilms and host colonization by symbiotic bacteria is less well understood. Tsetse flies (Glossina spp.) house 3 maternally transmitted symbionts, one of which is a commensal (Sodalis glossinidius) found in several host tissues, including the gut. We determined that Sodalis forms biofilms in the tsetse gut and that this process is influenced by the Sodalis outer membrane protein A (OmpA). Mutant Sodalis strains that do not produce OmpA (Sodalis ΔOmpA mutants) fail to form biofilms in vitro and are unable to colonize the tsetse gut unless endogenous symbiotic bacteria are present. Our data indicate that in the absence of biofilms, Sodalis ΔOmpA mutant cells are exposed to and eliminated by tsetse''s innate immune system, suggesting that biofilms help Sodalis evade the host immune system. Tsetse is the sole vector of pathogenic African trypanosomes, which also reside in the fly gut. Acquiring a better understanding of the dynamics that promote Sodalis colonization of the tsetse gut may enhance the development of novel disease control strategies.  相似文献   

16.
The age, insemination and ovulation status of tsetse flies Glossina pallidipes Austen (n = 154369) and Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood (n = 19659), captured over 11 years in Zimbabwe, are assessed by ovarian dissection. Instantaneous rates of insemination increase exponentially with age in both species; 90% insemination levels are reached after 5 days post‐emergence in G. m. morsitans and 7 days in G. pallidipes, varying little with season. More than 95% of both species have ovulated by the age of 8 days and 99% by 12 days. Older flies that have not ovulated are > 100‐fold more likely to be caught in October and November than in other months. A 500‐fold decrease in trap catches did not result in any detectible decrease in the probability of females being inseminated. The proportion of partially filled spermathecae rises for approximately 6 days then declines, consistent with some flies having mated more than once. For flies caught on electric nets, with wings undamaged during capture, wing‐fray data are used to extend ovarian age estimates up to 11 ovulations. Among these flies, the volume of sperm in the spermathecae declines little in flies that have ovulated up to seven times; thereafter, it declines by approximately 1% per ovulation. The time course of insemination and the mating frequency of females are important considerations in modelling tsetse fly populations, as well as for the dynamics of interventions involving the release of genetically‐modified insects, which should not be seriously compromised by the limited levels of polyandry currently observed.  相似文献   

17.
The invertebrate microbiome contributes to multiple aspects of host physiology, including nutrient supplementation and immune maturation processes. We identified and compared gut microbial abundance and diversity in natural tsetse flies from Uganda using five genetically distinct populations of Glossina fuscipes fuscipes and multiple tsetse species (Glossina morsitans morsitans, G. f. fuscipes, and Glossina pallidipes) that occur in sympatry in one location. We used multiple approaches, including deep sequencing of the V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene, 16S rRNA gene clone libraries, and bacterium-specific quantitative PCR (qPCR), to investigate the levels and patterns of gut microbial diversity from a total of 151 individuals. Our results show extremely limited diversity in field flies of different tsetse species. The obligate endosymbiont Wigglesworthia dominated all samples (>99%), but we also observed wide prevalence of low-density Sodalis (tsetse''s commensal endosymbiont) infections (<0.05%). There were also several individuals (22%) with high Sodalis density, which also carried coinfections with Serratia. Albeit in low density, we noted differences in microbiota composition among the genetically distinct G. f. fuscipes flies and between different sympatric species. Interestingly, Wigglesworthia density varied in different species (104 to 106 normalized genomes), with G. f. fuscipes having the highest levels. We describe the factors that may be responsible for the reduced diversity of tsetse''s gut microbiota compared to those of other insects. Additionally, we discuss the implications of Wigglesworthia and Sodalis density variations as they relate to trypanosome transmission dynamics and vector competence variations associated with different tsetse species.  相似文献   

18.
19.
In tsetse both sexes feed exclusively on the blood of vertebrates for a few minutes every 2-3 days. Tsetse flies seek cover from high temperatures to conserve energy and plants provide shelter for tsetse in all the biotopes they occupy. Recently, tsetse have taken cover in plantations and under the invasive bush Lantana camara that has invaded large areas of the tsetse fly belt of Africa. Flies from such refugia are implicated in sleeping sickness epidemics. In a wind tunnel we show that both foliage and an extract of volatiles from foliage of L. camara attract three tsetse spp. from different habitats: Glossina fuscipes fuscipes (riverine), G. brevipalpis (sylvatic) and G. pallidipes (savannah). Gas chromatography analysis of volatiles extracted from leaves and flowers of L. camara coupled to electroantennograme recordings show that 1-octen-3-ol and beta-caryophyllene are the major chemostimuli for the antennal receptor cells of the three tsetse spp. studied. A binary mixture of these products attracted these flies in the wind tunnel. The gas chromatography linked electroantennograme analysis of the L. camara extracts also show that the antennal receptor cells of the three tsetse spp. respond similarly to groups of volatiles derived from the major biosynthetic and catabolic pathways of plants, i.e. to mono- and sesquiterpenes, to lipoxidation products and to aromatics. Mixtures of these plant volatiles also attracted tsetse in the wind tunnel. These findings show that tsetse flies have conserved a strong sensitivity to volatile secondary products of plants, underlining the fundamental role of vegetation in tsetse survival.  相似文献   

20.
The activity of lectins in different species of tsetse was compared in vivo by the time taken to remove all trypanosomes from the midgut following an infective feed and in vitro by agglutination tests. Teneral male Glossina pallidipes Austen, G. austeni Newstead and G. p. palpalis R-D. removed 50% of all Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense Stephens & Fantham infections within 60 h. A 'refractory' line of G. m. morsitans Westwood took 170 h to kill 50% infections while a 'susceptible' line of the same species failed to kill 50%. Agglutination tests with midgut homogenates showed differences between fly stocks which accorded with differences in rate of trypanosome killing in vivo. Flies fed before an infective feed were able to remove trypanosomes from their midguts more quickly than flies infected as tenerals. Increasing the period of starvation before infection increased the susceptibility to trypanosome infection of non-teneral flies. Teneral flies showed little agglutinating activity in vitro, suggesting that lectin is produced in response to the bloodmeal. Feeding flies before infection also abolished the differences in rate of trypanosome killing found between teneral 'susceptible' and 'refractory' G. m. morsitans, suggesting that maternally inherited susceptibility to trypanosome infection is a phenomenon limited to teneral flies. Electron micrographs of midguts of G. m. morsitans suggest that procyclic trypanosomes are killed by cell lysis, presumably the result of membrane damage caused by lectin action.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号