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1.
Leishmania, a protozoan parasite of macrophages, has been shown to interfere with host cell signal transduction pathways including protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent signaling. Myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) and MARCKS-related protein (MRP, MacMARCKS) are PKC substrates in diverse cell types. MARCKS and MRP are thought to regulate the actin network and thereby participate in cellular responses involving cytoskeletal rearrangement. Because MRP is a major PKC substrate in macrophages, we examined its expression in response to infection by Leishmania. Activation of murine macrophages by cytokines increased MRP expression as determined by Western blot analysis. Infection with Leishmania promastigotes at the time of activation or up to 48 h postactivation strongly decreased MRP levels. Leishmania-dependent MRP depletion was confirmed by [3H]myristate labeling and by immunofluorescence microscopy. All species or strains of Leishmania parasites tested, including lipophosphoglycan-deficient Leishmania major L119, decreased MRP levels. MRP depletion was not obtained with other phagocytic stimuli including zymosan, latex beads, or heat-killed Streptococcus mitis, a Gram-positive bacterium. Experiments with [3H]myristate labeled proteins revealed the appearance of lower molecular weight fragments in Leishmania-infected cells suggesting that MRP depletion may be due to proteolytic degradation.  相似文献   

2.
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) remains a major public health problem worldwide. This disease is highly associated with chronic inflammation and a lack of the cellular immune responses against Leishmania. It is important to identify major factors driving the successful establishment of the Leishmania infection to develop better tools for the disease control. Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) is a key enzyme triggered by cellular stress, and its role in VL has not been investigated. In this study, we evaluated the role of HO-1 in the infection by Leishmania infantum chagasi, the causative agent of VL cases in Brazil. We found that L. chagasi infection or lipophosphoglycan isolated from promastigotes triggered HO-1 production by murine macrophages. Interestingly, cobalt protoporphyrin IX, an HO-1 inductor, increased the parasite burden in both mouse and human-derived macrophages. Upon L. chagasi infection, macrophages from Hmox1 knockout mice presented significantly lower parasite loads when compared with those from wild-type mice. Furthermore, upregulation of HO-1 by cobalt protoporphyrin IX diminished the production of TNF-α and reactive oxygen species by infected murine macrophages and increased Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase expression in human monocytes. Finally, patients with VL presented higher systemic concentrations of HO-1 than healthy individuals, and this increase of HO-1 was reduced after antileishmanial treatment, suggesting that HO-1 is associated with disease susceptibility. Our data argue that HO-1 has a critical role in the L. chagasi infection and is strongly associated with the inflammatory imbalance during VL. Manipulation of HO-1 pathways during VL could serve as an adjunctive therapeutic approach.  相似文献   

3.
Leishmania pathogenesis is primarily studied using the disease-inducing promastigote stage of Leishmania major. Despite many efforts, all attempts so far have failed to culture the disease-relevant multiplying amastigote stage of L. major. Here, we established a stably growing axenic L. major amastigote culture system that was characterized genetically, morphologically, and by stage-specific DsRed protein expression. We found parasite stage-specific disease development in resistant C57BL/6 mice. Human neutrophils, as first host cells for promastigotes, do not take up amastigotes. In human macrophages, we observed an amastigote-specific complement receptor 3-mediated, endocytotic entry mechanism, whereas promastigotes are taken up by complement receptor 1-mediated phagocytosis. Promastigote infection of macrophages induced the inflammatory mediators TNF, CCL3, and CCL4, whereas amastigote infection was silent and resulted in significantly increased parasite numbers: from 7.1 ± 1.4 (after 3 h) to 20.1 ± 7.9 parasites/cell (after 96 h). Our study identifies Leishmania stage-specific disease development, host cell preference, entry mechanism, and immune evasion. Since the amastigote stage is the disease-propagating form found in the infected mammalian host, the newly developed L. major axenic cultures will serve as an important tool in better understanding the amastigote-driven immune response in leishmaniasis.  相似文献   

4.
Protozoan parasites of Leishmania spp. invade macrophages as promastigotes and differentiate into replicative amastigotes within parasitophorous vacuoles. Infection of inbred strains of mice with Leishmania major is a well-studied model of the mammalian immune response to Leishmania species, but the ultrastructure and biochemical properties of the parasitophorous vacuole occupied by this parasite have been best characterized for other species of Leishmania. We examined the parasitophorous vacuole occupied by L. major in lymph nodes of infected mice and in bone marrow-derived macrophages infected in vitro. At all time points after infection, single L. major amastigotes were wrapped tightly by host membrane, suggesting that amastigotes segregate into separate vacuoles during replication. This small, individual vacuole contrasts sharply with the large, communal vacuoles occupied by Leishmania amazonensis. An extensive survey of the literature revealed that the single vacuoles occupied by L. major are characteristic of those formed by Old World species of Leishmania, while New World species of Leishmania form large vacuoles occupied by many amastigotes.  相似文献   

5.
Infection of macrophages by the intracellular protozoan parasite Leishmania involves specific attachment to the host membrane, followed by phagocytosis and intracellular survival and growth. Two parasite molecules have been implicated in the attachment event: Leishmania lipopolysaccharide (L-LPS) and a glycoprotein (gp63). This study was designed to clarify the role of L-LPS in infection and the stage in the process of infection at which it operates. We have recently identified a Leishmania major strain (LRC-L119) which lacks the L-LPS molecule and is not infective for hamsters or mice. This parasite was isolated from a gerbil in Kenya and was identified phenotypically as L. major by isoenzyme and fatty acid analysis. In this study we have confirmed at the genotype level that LRC-L119 is L. major by analyzing and comparing the organization of cloned DNA sequences in the genome of different strains of L. major. Here we show that LRC-L119 promastigotes are phagocytosed rapidly by macrophages in vitro, but in contrast to virulent strains of L. major, they are then killed over a period of 18 hr. In addition, we show that transfer of purified L-LPS from a virulent clone of L. major (V121) into LRC-L119 promastigotes confers on them the ability to survive in macrophages in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Leishmania donovani is an obligate intracellular parasite that infects macrophages of the vertebrate host resulting in visceral leishmaniasis in humans, a major public health problem worldwide. The molecular mechanisms involved in internalization of Leishmania are still poorly characterized. We report here that cholesterol sequestration by the sterol-binding antifungal polyene antibiotic nystatin markedly inhibits binding and entry of non-opsonized L. donovani promastigotes into macrophages. Interestingly, these effects are not observed when serum-opsonized L. donovani are used for infectivity studies thus pointing the essential role of cholesterol in mediating entry of the parasite via the non-opsonic pathway. Based on our earlier results where leishmanial infectivity was shown to be sensitive to physical depletion of cholesterol from macrophages, these results indicate that the mere sequestration of cholesterol in the host plasma membrane is sufficient to inhibit the binding and entry of non-opsonized L. donovani. These results represent the first report on the effect of a cholesterol-sequestering agent on the entry of Leishmania parasites to host macrophages. More importantly, these findings offer the possibility of reevaluating the mechanism behind the effectiveness of current therapeutic strategies to treat leishmaniasis.  相似文献   

7.
In this study we show that protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and also protein tyrosine phosphatases are involved in the uptake of virulent and avirulent Leishmania donovani promastigotes by macrophage cells. Protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as genistein or tyrphostin 25 decrease parasite uptake in a dose-dependent manner. Addition of sodium orthovanadate, a protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor, prior to infection significantly increases parasite internalization. A similar uptake profile was observed with both virulent and avirulent L. donovani promastigotes. Treatment of macrophages with cytochalasin B, an inhibitor of actin polymerization prevents promastigote uptake, indicating that a tyrosine kinase induced actin polymerization signal may be necessary for the entry of the parasites. In contrast, neither genistein nor tyrphostin significantly reduce intracellular replication of this pathogen or nitric oxide production, suggesting that the PTK-mediated signal is not related to the ultimate virulence mechanism associated with intracellular replication of this pathogen. These data collectively suggest that protein tyrosine kinase mediated entry of L. donovani promastigotes into macrophages is not a virulence-associated event.  相似文献   

8.
Monoclonal antibodies were raised against pathogenic promastigotes ofLeishmania donovani of Indian origin. Among these, one was used for immuno-affinity purification of a 78 kDa membrane protein present in both the amastigote and promastigote forms of the parasite. Results of immunoblot experiments with the anti-78 kDa antibody revealed that the protein was present only in parasites belonging to theL. donovani complex. The expression of the protein was observed to be the same during different phases of growth of the promastigotes. Therefore, the 78 kDa protein is neither stage-specific nor differentially regulated. Surface iodination and subcellular fractionation of the promastigotes indicated that the protein was localized on the cell surface. The 78 kDa protein was found to inhibit the binding of promastigotes to macrophages significantly, suggesting that it may play a role in the process of infection. Thus, here we report the purification of a surface protein ofL. donovani of Indian origin, which may play an important role in the process of infection.  相似文献   

9.
This work aims to study the influence of H-2 locus in the control of Leishmania infantum infection by evaluating whether cytokine responses by host macrophages of different H-2 haplotype are differentially regulated, either induced or actively impaired during parasite growth and replication. This study shows that macrophages of "non-cure" phenotype (H-2(d)) are more susceptible to infection with virulent L. infantum promastigotes. Virulent parasites lead to impaired IL-12 and inhibited TNF-alpha expression. The degree of parasite virulence is an important contributing factor to differences detected in cytokine expression. Virulent parasites also induced TGF-beta, a deactivating cytokine that is known to suppress Th-1 type responses, thus allowing the parasite to subvert antimicrobial activity and increase its chances of survival. Depending on specific host haplotype, cells differentially respond to infection since TNF-alpha expression is inhibited and TGF-beta is enhanced by macrophages of "non-cure" phenotype, thus perhaps determining their degree of susceptibility in this strain of mice.  相似文献   

10.
The immune mechanisms that underlie resistance and susceptibility to leishmaniasis are not completely understood for all species of Leishmania. It is becoming clear that the immune response, the parasite elimination by the host and, as a result, the outcome of the disease depend both on the host and on the species of the infecting Leishmania. Here, we analyzed the outcome of the infection of BALB/c mice with L. guyanensis in vivo and in vitro. We showed that BALB/c mice, which are a prototype of susceptible host for most species of Leishmania, dying from these infections, develop insignificant or no cutaneous lesions and eliminate the parasite when infected with promastigotes of L. guyanensis. In vitro, we found that thioglycollate-elicited BALB/c peritoneal macrophages, which are unable to eliminate L. amazonensis without previous activation with cytokines or lipopolysaccharide, can kill L. guyanensis amastigotes. This is the first report showing that infection of peritoneal macrophages with stationary phase promastigotes efficiently triggers innate microbicidal mechanisms that are effective in eliminating the amastigotes, without exogenous activation. We demonstrated that L. guyanensis amastigotes die inside the macrophages through an apoptotic process that is independent of nitric oxide and is mediated by reactive oxygen intermediates generated in the host cell during infection. This innate killing mechanism of macrophages may account for the resistance of BALB/c mice to infection by L. guyanensis.  相似文献   

11.
In Leishmania amazonensis, kinetoplastid membrane protein-11 (KMP-11) expression increases during meta-cyclogenesis and is higher in amastigotes than in promastigotes, suggesting a role for this protein in the infection of the mammalian host. We show that the addition of KMP-11 exacerbates L. amazonensis infection in peritoneal macrophages from BALB/c mice by increasing interleukin (IL)-10 secretion and arginase activity while reducing nitric oxide (NO) production. The doses of KMP-11, the IL-10 levels and the intracellular amastigote loads were strongly, positively and significantly correlated. The increase in parasite load induced by KMP-11 was inhibited by anti-KMP-11 or anti-IL-10 neutralising antibodies, but not by isotype controls. The neutralising antibodies, but not the isotype controls, were also able to significantly decrease the parasite load in macrophages cultured without the addition of KMP-11, demonstrating that KMP-11-induced exacerbation of the infection is not dependent on the addition of exogenous KMP-11 and that the protein naturally expressed by the parasite is able to promote it. In this study, the exacerbating effect of KMP-11 on macrophage infection with Leishmania is for the first time demonstrated, implicating it as a virulence factor in L. amazonensis. The stimulation of IL-10 production and arginase activity and the inhibition of NO synthesis are likely involved in this effect.  相似文献   

12.
Within the mammalian host, Leishmania donovani is an obligatory intracellular protozoan that resides and multiplies exclusively in the phagolysosomes of macrophages. The outcome of this infection is governed by the interaction between Leishmania and macrophage molecules that ultimately effect the expression of genes within both cells. To explore the effect of this intracellular infection on macrophage gene expression, a cDNA expression array analysis was performed to compare gene expression profiles in noninfected and L. donovani-infected macrophages. In this manner, it was possible to examine the effect of infection on the expression of several hundred well-characterized host cell genes in an unbiased manner. Interestingly, approximately 40% of the genes whose expression was detected in macrophages were down-regulated during infection with L. donovani. However, several genes were also induced during the infection process, some of which could play a role in recruitment of additional macrophages to the site of infection. Taken together, the general suppression of gene expression in addition to the selective induction of key genes is likely to play an important role in allowing the parasite to survive and proliferate within its host macrophage cell.  相似文献   

13.
Ecotin is a potent inhibitor of family S1A serine peptidases, enzymes lacking in the protozoan parasite Leishmania major . Nevertheless, L. major has three ecotin-like genes, termed inhibitor of serine peptidase (ISP). ISP1 is expressed in vector-borne procyclic and metacyclic promastigotes, whereas ISP2 is also expressed in the mammalian amastigote stage. Recombinant ISP2 inhibited neutrophil elastase, trypsin and chymotrypsin with K is between 7.7 and 83 nM. L. major ISP2–ISP3 double null mutants (Δ isp 2/3) were created. These grew normally as promastigotes, but were internalized by macrophages more efficiently than wild-type parasites due to the upregulation of phagocytosis by a mechanism dependent on serine peptidase activity. Δ isp 2/3 promastigotes transformed to amastigotes, but failed to divide for 48 h. Intracellular multiplication of Δ isp 2/3 was similar to wild-type parasites when serine peptidase inhibitors were present, suggesting that defective intracellular growth results from the lack of serine peptidase inhibition during promastigote uptake. Δ isp 2/3 mutants were more infective than wild-type parasites to BALB/c mice at the early stages of infection, but became equivalent as the infection progressed. These data support the hypothesis that ISPs of L. major target host serine peptidases and influence the early stages of infection of the mammalian host.  相似文献   

14.
This paper reports the characterization of a new ABC transporter (LtrABC1.1), related to the human ABCA subfamily, in the protozoan parasite Leishmania tropica. LtrABC1.1 is a tandem duplicated gene flanked by inverted repeats. LtrABC1.1 is expressed mainly in the flagellar pocket of the parasite. Drug resistance studies in Leishmania overexpressing LtrABC1.1 showed the transporter not to confer resistance to a range of unrelated drugs. LtrABC1.1 appears to be involved in lipid movements across the plasma membrane of the parasite since overexpression reduces the accumulation of fluorescent phospholipid analogues. The activity of this protein may also affect membrane movement processes since secreted acid phosphatase (SAP) activity was significantly lower in promastigotes overexpressing LtrABC1.1. In vitro infection experiments with macrophages indicated LtrABC1.1-transfected parasites to be significantly less infective. Together, these results suggest that this new ABC transporter could play a role in lipid movements across the plasma membrane, and that its activity might influence vesicle trafficking. This is the first ABCA-like transporter described in unicellular eukaryotes.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Leishmania donovani ADP-ribosylation factor-like protein 3A (LdARL-3A) is a small G protein isolated from the protozoan parasite L. donovani with no defined physiological function. Previously [Cuvillier, A., Redon, F., Antoine, J.-C., Chardin, P., DeVos, T., and Merlin, G. (2000) J Cell Sci 113: 2065-2074] we have shown that overexpression in L. amazonensis promastigotes of the mutated protein LdARL-3A-Q70L, which remains constitutively associated with GTP, leads to the disappearance of the flagellum but does not impair cell viability or growth. Here we report that parasites overexpressing LdARL-3A-Q70L can invade in vitro cultivated macrophages to the same extent as control cells, demonstrating that the flagellum is not necessary for attachment to or engulfment into macrophages. These infections are productive because amastigotes differentiate and multiply. However, aflagellated LdARL-3A-Q70L-overexpressing Leishmania promastigotes could not survive in experimentally infected Lutzomyia longipalpis insect vectors, in contrast to untransfected or native LdARL-3A-overexpressing cells. Overexpression of the native and mutated proteins did not modify in vitro procyclic to metacyclic lipophosphoglycan maturation or differentiation from procyclic to metacyclic promastigotes, nevertheless there is a block in transmission of Leishmania. Better understanding of LdARL-3A pathways, notably those regarding flagellum biogenesis, may lead to the future development of Leishmania-specific drugs, which may stop parasite transmission in nature without affecting other species.  相似文献   

17.
Leishmania promastigotes are introduced into the skin by blood-sucking phlebotomine sand flies. In the vertebrate host, promastigotes invade macrophages, transform into amastigotes and multiply intracellularly. Sand fly saliva was shown to enhance the development of cutaneous leishmaniasis lesions by inhibiting some immune functions of the host macrophages. This study demonstrates that sand fly saliva promotes parasite survival and proliferation. First, macrophages gravitated towards increasing concentrations of sand fly saliva in vitro. Secondly, saliva increased the percentage of macrophages that became infected with Leishmania promastigotes and exacerbated the parasite load in these cells. Thus, during natural transmission, saliva probably reduces the exposure of promastigotes to the immune system by attracting macrophages to the parasite inoculation site and by accelerating the entry of promastigotes into macrophages. Saliva may also enhance lesion development by shortening the generation time of dividing intracellular amastigotes.  相似文献   

18.
Mechanisms of acquired immunity in leishmaniasis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Self-curing cutaneous leishmaniasis depends on T cell-mediated immune activation of infected macrophages. Failure of immune control in inbred mouse models of metastasizing mucocutaneous and visceralizing forms of the disease involves, respectively, insusceptibility of the parasite and the generation of T cells that suppress a potentially curative response. Prophylactic immunization in man has so far been restricted to cutaneous leishmaniasis and based on inducing infection under controlled conditions with virulent Leishmania tropica major promastigotes. The feasibility of immunization against visceral leishmaniasis merits reconsideration. BALB/c mice are genetically vulnerable to L. tropica major, which produces a fatal visceralizing type of disease involving specific suppression of cell-mediated immunity. Potent and lasting protection can be induced by repeated intravenous immunization with irradiated promastigotes. The efficacy of this 'vaccine' is relatively heat-stable (1 h at 56 degrees C). Immunity is not attributable to antibody but to the generation of Lyt-1+2- T cells which, although possessing helper and macrophage-activating functions, do not express classical delayed-type hypersensitivity. The immunological features of this system and its relevance to the possibility of protection against human Leishmania donovani infection are considered.  相似文献   

19.
Leishmania donovani causes human visceral leishmaniasis. The parasite infectious cycle comprises extracellular flagellated promastigotes that proliferate inside the insect vector, and intracellular nonmotile amastigotes that multiply within infected host cells. Using primary macrophages infected with virulent metacyclic promastigotes and high spatiotemporal resolution microscopy, we dissect the dynamics of the early infection process. We find that motile promastigotes enter macrophages in a polarized manner through their flagellar tip and are engulfed into host lysosomal compartments. Persistent intracellular flagellar activity leads to reorientation of the parasite flagellum toward the host cell periphery and results in oscillatory parasite movement. The latter is associated with local lysosomal exocytosis and host cell plasma membrane wounding. These findings implicate lysosome recruitment followed by lysosome exocytosis, consistent with parasite-driven host cell injury, as key cellular events in Leishmania host cell infection. This work highlights the role of promastigote polarity and motility during parasite entry.  相似文献   

20.
Proteophosphoglycan (PPG) is a newly described mucin-like glycoprotein found on the surface of Leishmania major promastigotes and secreted in the culture supernatant. We show here that antigenically similar PPGs are present in several Leishmania species. PPG could also be detected on the surface of amastigotes and in small, parasite-free vesicles in infected macrophages. Because of the similarity of its carbohydrate chains to lipophosphoglycan, a parasite receptor for host macrophages, PPG was tested for binding to macrophages. PPG bound to macrophages and was internalized in a time-dependent manner. PPG inhibited the production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and synergized with interferon-gamma to stimulate the production of nitric oxide by macrophages. PPG may contribute to the binding of Leishmania to host cells and may play a role in modulating the biology of the infected macrophage at the early stage of infection.  相似文献   

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