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1.
Bortoletti G. and Diaz G. 1978. Stereological investigation on the increase in surface area due to the microtriches of the hydatid cyst in different organs and in different hosts. International Journal for Parasitology8: 433–436. The increase in surface area of the germinal membrane due to the microtriches has been morphometrically investigated in Echinococcus granulosus cysts developed in three different intermediate hosts. The results, achieved by Stereological methods, indicate that the development of the microtriches: (a) is more or less homogeneous all over the germinal membrane of the cysts; (b) is greater in human than in pig and sheep cysts; (c) is also greater in lung than in liver cysts within the same host and it is not related to the fertility or sterility of the parasite.  相似文献   

2.
SYNOPSIS. In the nearly mature macrogametes of Eimeria auburnensis, the cell membrane is a unit membrane, with underlying and overlying osmiophilic layers usually present. Cup-shaped micropores were occasionally seen. Smaller, V-shaped invaginations were also found in considerable numbers at the surface. At the deepest point, these invaginations were bounded only by a unit membrane. Immediately adjacent to this point, vesicles with homogenous electron-pale contents bounded by a similar unit membrane, were frequently seen. Pinocytosis evidently occurs at the site of these invaginations. Numerous folds of the host cell membrane bordering the vacuole in which the parasite lay extended about 0.1–0.7 μ into the vacuole. These “intravacuolar folds” varied in depth and number in different specimens. In some, the majority of folds had apparently become disconnected from the host cell membrane. A highly developed smooth endoplasmic reticulum occurred in the adjacent host cell cytoplasm. The intravacuolar folds may assist in transfer of nutrients, including membrane material, from the host cell to the parasite. The evidence indicates that in this species of Eimeria nutrients are taken into the parasite primarily as fluids by pinocytosis and possibly other processes.  相似文献   

3.
The origin of the vacuole membrane surrounding the intracellular protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii is not known. Although unique secretory organelles, the rhoptries, discharge during invasion of the host cell and may contribute to the formation of this parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM), no direct evidence for this hypothesis exists. Using a novel approach we have determined that parasite-encoded proteins are present in the PVM, exposed to the host cell cytoplasm. In infected cells incubated with streptolysin-O or low concentrations of digitonin, the host cell plasma membrane was selectively permeabilized without significantly affecting the integrity of the PVM. Antisera prepared against whole parasites or a parasite fraction enriched in rhoptries and dense granules reacted with the PVM in these permeabilized cells, indicating that parasite-encoded antigens were exposed on the cytoplasmic side of the PVM. Parasite antigens responsible for this staining of the PVM were identified by fractionating total parasite proteins by SDS-PAGE and velocity sedimentation, and then affinity purifying "fraction-specific" antibodies from the crude antisera. Proteins responsible for the PVM- staining, identified with fraction-specific antibodies, cofractionated with known rhoptry proteins. The gene encoding one of the rhoptry proteins, ROP 2, was cloned and sequenced, predicting and integral membrane protein. Antibodies specific for ROP 2 reacted with the intact PVM. These results provide the first direct evidence that rhoptry contents participate in the formation of the PVM of T. gondii and suggest a possible role of ROP 2 in parasite-host cell interactions.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Holmsella australis Noble andKraft ms. is a colourless red algal parasite, forming whitish pustules on its photosynthetic red algal host,Gracilaria furcellata Harvey. In the infected region, host cortical tissue continues to grow and enclose the expanding pustule. Filaments of both host and parasite grow apically, the cells being connected by primary pit connections (PCs). Secondary PCs form between cells of the same species, and in addition,H. australis initiates the formation of secondary PCs with cells ofG. furcellata. All three types of secondary PC are morphologically distinct. In hostparasite PCs the surface adjoining the host cell is similar in structure to a host-host PC, while that adjoining the parasite cell has the structure of a parasite-parasite PC. The plasma membrane is continuous between the cells of the unrelated host and parasite. In addition, a cap membrane is typically produced only on the host surface, though occasionally the parasite side is enclosed by a cap membrane as well. Cap membranes are absent from parasite-parasite PCs (making them intracellular), while host-host PCs are typically extracellular, both cells producing cap membranes. The presence or absence of a cap membrane in certain positions appears to vary, and suggests that cells may be able to regulate its presence. Since transport of nutrients would be expected to occur from host to parasite cells, and between parasite cells, the morphological evidence presented here suggests the PCs may be the pathway.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The fine structure of erythrocytic stages of Plasmodium knowlesi was compared with that of the same parasite isolated from its host cell by a saponin technique. Rhesus monkeys experimentally infected with Plasmodium knowlesi were the source of parasitized red cells. The erythrocytic stages of this Plasmodium showed all the organelles described in other mammalian forms; the nucleus lacked a typical nucleolus but contained a cluster of granules. P. knowlesi did not have protozoan-type mitochondria as do the avian and reptilian forms, but had double-membrane-bounded bodies as observed in other mammalian malarial parasites.The isolation procedure caused a slight swelling of the parasite, but in general, the structure and structural relationships of the parasite were preserved. However, the isolation technique gave a new insight into the connection of the host cell cytoplasm with the large, so-called food vacuoles of the parasite. The parasite freed from its host cell showed clear spaces where the large vacuoles had been. The content of these vacuoles had been removed together with the red cell cytoplasm. As the nature of the isolation procedure precluded any disruption of the parasite itself, these findings support our view that the vacuoles are not true food vacuoles. If these were true food vacuoles, they would be completely enclosed by a parasite membrane within the parasite cytoplasm. However, we have demonstrated that they represent extensions of host cell cytoplasm in direct communication with the rest of the red cell. The outer membrane surrounding the intra-erythrocytic parasites disappeared after isolation of the parasite from the host cell. This strongly suggested that the outer membrane is of host cell origin. The budding process of the merozoites from a schizont was also described and discussed.This paper is contribution No. 558 from the Army Research Program on Malaria and was supported in part by Research Grant AI 08970-01 from the United States Public Health Service.  相似文献   

6.
The site specificity that avian Eimeria sporozoites and, to a more limited degree, other apicomplexan parasites exhibit for invasion in vivo suggests that specific interactions between the sporozoites and the target host cells may mediate the invasion process. Although sporozoite motility and structural and secreted antigens appear to provide the mechanisms for propelling the sporozoite into the host cell,there is a growing body of evidence that the host cell provides characteristics by which the sporozoites recognise and interact with the host cell as a prelude to invasion. Molecules on the surface of cells in the intestinal epithelium, that act as receptor or recognition sites for sporozoite invasion, may be included among these characteristics. The existence of receptor molecules for invasion by apicomplexan parasites was suggested by in vitro studies in which parasite invasion was inhibited in cultured cells that were treated with a variety of substances designed to selectively alter the host cell membrane. These substance included cationic compounds or molecules, enzymes that cleave specific linkages, protease inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies, etc. More specific evidence for the presence of receptors was provided by the binding of parasite antigens to specific host cell surface molecules.Analyses of host cells have implicated 22, 31, and 37 kDa antigens, surface membrane glycoconjugates,conserved epitopes of host cells and sporozoites, etc., but no treatment that perturbs these putative receptors has completely inhibited invasion of the cells by parasites. Regardless of the mechanism,sporozoites of the avian Eimeria also invade the same specific sites in foreign host birds that they invade in the natural host. Thus, site specificity for invasion may be a response to characteristics of the intestine that are shared by a number of hosts rather than to a unique trait of the natural host. Protective immunity elicited against avian Eimeria species is not manifested in a total blockade of parasite invasion. In fact, the effect of immunity on invasion differs according to the eliciting species and depends upon the area of the intestine that is invaded. Immunity produced against caecal species of avian Eimeria, for example Eimeria tenella and Eimeria adenoeides, inhibits subsequent invasion by homologous or heterologous challenge species, regardless of the area of the intestine that the challenge species invade. Conversely, in birds immunised with upper intestinal species, Eimeria acervulina and Eimeria meleagrimitis, invasion by challenge species is not decreased and often is significantly increased.  相似文献   

7.
Carey KL  Jongco AM  Kim K  Ward GE 《Eukaryotic cell》2004,3(5):1320-1330
Many intracellular pathogens are separated from the cytosol of their host cells by a vacuole membrane. This membrane serves as a critical interface between the pathogen and the host cell, across which nutrients are imported, wastes are excreted, and communication between the two cells takes place. Very little is known about the vacuole membrane proteins mediating these processes in any host-pathogen interaction. During a screen for monoclonal antibodies against novel surface or secreted proteins of Toxoplasma gondii, we identified ROP4, a previously uncharacterized member of the ROP2 family of proteins. We report here on the sequence, posttranslational processing, and subcellular localization of ROP4, a type I transmembrane protein. Mature, processed ROP4 is localized to the rhoptries, secretory organelles at the apical end of the parasite, and is secreted from the parasite during host cell invasion. Released ROP4 associates with the vacuole membrane and becomes phosphorylated in the infected cell. Similar results are seen with ROP2. Further analysis of ROP4 showed it to be phosphorylated on multiple sites, a subset of which result from the action of either host cell protein kinase(s) or parasite kinase(s) activated by host cell factors. The localization and posttranslational modification of ROP4 and other members of the ROP2 family of proteins within the infected cell make them well situated to play important roles in vacuole membrane function.  相似文献   

8.
Invasion of host cells by apicomplexan parasites is initiated when specialized secretory organelles called micronemes discharge protein complexes onto the parasite surface in response to a rise in parasite intracellular calcium levels. The microneme proteins establish interactions with host cell receptors, engaging the parasite with the host cell surface, and signal for the immediate exocytosis of another set of secretory organelles named the rhoptries. The rhoptry proteins reprogram the invaded host cell and participate in the formation of the parasitophorous vacuole in which the intracellular parasite resides and replicates. Disengagement of the invading parasite from the host cell receptors involves the action of at least one parasite plasma membrane rhomboid protease, which is concomitantly implicated in a checkpoint that signals the parasite to switch from an invasive to a replicative mode.  相似文献   

9.
ABSTRACT. Microsporidia of the genus Encephalitozoon undergo merogony and sporogony in a parasitophorous vacuole within the host cell. Cultured green monkey kidney cells infected with Encephalitozoon hellem were loaded with the fluorescent dyes fura-2 or BCECF in order to measure intracellular concentrations of calcium and hydrogen ions respectively. Both the parasitophorous vacuole calcium concentration and pH values resembled those of the host cell cytoplasm in infected cells. Calcein entered the parasitophorous vacuole but not other host cell vacuoles or parasite stages within the parasitophorous vacuole. The lack of a pH or calcium concentration gradient across the parasitophorous vacuole membrane and the permeability of this membrane to a large anion such as calcein suggest that the vacuole membrane surrounding E. hellem resembles that surrounding some other intracellular parasites such as Toxoplasma gondii. A potential role is discussed for the parasitophorous vacuole calcium concentration in germination in situ.  相似文献   

10.
Structural bases of the cytolytic mechanisms of Entamoeba histolytica   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The cellular bases of the powerful cytolytic activity of the human protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica were explored by studying the effect of the virulent strain HM1:IMSS on epithelial monolayers of MDCK cells using a combination of time-lapse microcinematography and transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Early alterations of the epithelial cell membranes were detected by measuring changes in the transepithelial electrical resistance of MDCK monolayers mounted in Ussing chambers. The aggressive mechanism of E. histolytica trophozoites was found to be a complex, multifactorial phenomenon that included hit-and-run damage to the plasma membrane of effector cells mediated through contact, phagocytosis of lysed or apparently intact, but detached, MDCK cells, and intracellular degradation of ingested cells. Following contact with amebas, the epithelial monolayers showed a pronounced lowering of transepithelial resistance, opening of tight junctions, distortion of microvilli, surface blebbing, and the presence of minute focal discontinuities in the plasma membrane. There was no evidence of amebic exocytosis, membrane fusion, or junction formation between the parasite and host plasma membranes. Although modifications in the epithelial cell membranes usually preceded lysis, the cytolytic activity of the parasite did not exclusively involve damage to the plasma membrane of the cultured host cells but also was mediated by avid phagocytosis, the displacement and separation of neighboring cells by means of pseudopodial activity, and the "pinching-off" of the peripheral cytoplasm of epithelial cells.  相似文献   

11.
To explore the mechanisms by which Cryptosporidium parvum infects epithelial cells, we performed a detailed morphological study by serial electron microscopy to assess attachment to and internalization of biliary epithelial cells by C. parvum in an in vitro model of human biliary cryptosporidiosis. When C. parvum sporozoites initially attach to the host cell membrane, the rhoptry of the sporozoite extends to the attachment site; both micronemes and dense granules are recruited to the apical complex region of the attached parasite. During internalization, numerous vacuoles covered by the parasite's plasma membrane are formed and cluster together to establish a preparasitophorous vacuole. This preparasitophorous vacuole comes in contact with host cell membrane to form a host cell-parasite membrane interface, beneath which an electron-dense band begins to appear within the host cell cytoplasm. Simultaneously, host cells display membrane protrusion along the edge of the host cell-parasite membrane interface, resulting in the formation of a mature parasitophorous vacuole that completely covers the parasite. During internalization, vacuole-like structures appear in the apical complex region of the attached sporozoite, which bud out into host cells. A tunnel directly connecting the parasite to the host cell cytoplasm forms during internalization and remains when the parasite is totally internalized. Immunoelectron microscopy showed that sporozoite-associated proteins were localized along the dense band and at the parasitophorous vacuole membrane. These morphological observations provide evidence that secretion of parasite apical organelles and protrusion of host cell membrane play an important role in the attachment and internalization of host epithelial cells by C. parvum.  相似文献   

12.
The attachment site of Cryptosporidium muris to host cells was investigated using the freeze-fracture method. Cryptosporidium muris was enveloped by a double membrane of host plasma membrane origin, which formed the parasitophorous vacuole. The outer membrane of the double membrane was continuous with the host plasma membrane at the dense band, while the inner membrane was connected with the anterior part of the parasite plasma membrane at the annular ring. The density of intramembranous particles (IMP) was dramatically altered at the above two junctures. The outer parasitophorous membrane showed low IMP-density as compared to the host plasma membrane, although both membranes were continuous. The inner parasitophorous membrane had few IMP, whereas the parasite plasma membrane showed numerous IMP. When the attachment sites of parasites and host cells were fractured, circular-shaped fractured faces were observed on both sites of the parasite and host cell. These exposed faces corresponded to the dense bands and were very similar in size in each parasite.  相似文献   

13.
Bortoletti G. and Ferretti G. 1985. Morphological studies on the early development of Taenia taeniaeformis larvae in susceptible mice. International Journal for Parasitology15: 365–375. Taenia taeniaeformis larvae which develop into infective strobilocerci in C3H mice have been studied from the 5th to the 15th day of development (L5–L15), both at light and electron microscope level. The L5 were initially compact, without a central cavity but then become vacuolized. Until stages L7–L8 they were surrounded by a perilarval amorphous layer (PAL) made up of a finely granular material which prevented the host cells from making contact with the larval tegument. The larval volume increased considerably between stages L6 and L8, remained unchanged from L9 to L13, but continued to increase thereafter. The larval cellular layer, which appeared as a single, large ‘syncitial system’, grow until stages L14–L15 when the scolex anlagen began to form. The tegument was initially incompletely organized and was covered by microvilli. These were completely replaced by microtriches from stage L8 onward. Sometimes both microvilli and microtriches were together observed in stage L7. Microvilli fragments, sometimes beaded, could be observed at L5 within the damaged cytoplasm of host cell debris. Very often they were branched at different heights, especially in stages L5–L7. In L10–L15 all undamaged microtriches increased in density and formed bundles which invaded the host cells. In stages L5–L8 and in some L9, muscular bundles started to become organized inside the tegumental distal cytoplasm (TDC), and after become independent in the subtegumental cellular layer (SCL). Until L8–L9 the larvae were surrounded by host cells debris. From stages L8–L10 onwards the adjacent host cells were less damaged though the larval microtriches penetrated them deeply. In stages L5–L7 neutrophils together with macrophages and some damaged hepatocytes were detected, while eosinophils were present only from L8 onward. In the other stages neutrophils clearly diminished in numbers, whereas macrophages had increased. No mastcells and few plasma cells were observed.  相似文献   

14.
The profound changes in the morphology, antigenicity, and functional properties of the host erythrocyte membrane induced by intraerythrocytic parasites of the human malaria Plasmodium falciparum are poorly understood at the molecular level. We have used mouse mAbs to identify a very large malarial protein (Mr approximately 300,000) that is exported from the parasite and deposited on the cytoplasmic face of the erythrocyte membrane. This protein is denoted P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 2 (Pf EMP 2). The mAbs did not react with the surface of intact infected erythrocytes, nor was Pf EMP 2 accessible to exogenous proteases or lactoperoxidase-catalyzed radioiodination of intact cells. The mAbs also had no effect on in vitro cytoadherence of infected cells to the C32 amelanotic melanoma cell line. These properties distinguish Pf EMP 2 from Pf EMP 1, the cell surface malarial protein of similar size that is associated with the cytoadherent property of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes. The mAbs did not react with Pf EMP 1. In one strain of parasite there was a significant difference in relative mobility of the 125I-surface-labeled Pf EMP 1 and the biosynthetically labeled Pf EMP 2, further distinguishing these proteins. By cryo-thin-section immunoelectron microscopy we identified organelles involved in the transit of Pf EMP through the erythrocyte cytoplasm to the internal face of the erythrocyte membrane where the protein is associated with electron-dense material under knobs. These results show that the intraerythrocytic malaria parasite has evolved a novel system for transporting malarial proteins beyond its own plasma membrane, through a vacuolar membrane and the host erythrocyte cytoplasm to the erythrocyte membrane, where they become membrane bound and presumably alter the properties of this membrane to the parasite's advantage.  相似文献   

15.
The cellular bases of the powerful cytolytic activity of the human protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica were explored by studying the effect of the virulent strain HM1:IMSS on epithelial monolayers of MDCK cells using a combination of time-lapse microcinematography and transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Early alterations of the epithelial cell membranes were detected by measuring changes in the transepithelial electrical resistance of MOCK monolayers mounted in Ussing chambers. The aggressive mechanism of E. histolytica trophozoites was found to be a complex, multifactorial phenomenon that included hit-and-run damage to the plasma membrane of effector cells mediated through contact, phagocytosis of lysed or apparently intact, but detached, MDCK cells, and inlracellular degradation of ingested cells. Following contact with amebas, the epithelial monolayers showed a pronounced lowering of transepithelial resistance, opening of tight junctions, distortion of microvilli, surface blebbing, and the presence of minute focal discontinuities in the plasma membrane. There was no evidence of amebic exocytosis, membrane fusion, or junction formation between the parasite and host plasma membranes. Although modifications in the epithelial cell membranes usually preceded lysis, the cytolytic activity of the parasite did not exclusively involve damage to the plasma membrane of the cultured host cells but also was mediated by avid phagocytosis, the displacement and separation of neighboring cells by means of pseudopodial activity, and the “pinching-off” of the peripheral cytoplasm of epithelial cells.  相似文献   

16.
Trypanosoma cruzi, an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite, exhibits developmental regulation of virulence. Although both noninfective epimastigote and infective trypomastigote stages of T. cruzi enter phagocytic cells via the formation of a parasitophorous vacuole (PV), only the latter developmental stages survive ingestion and perpetuate the infection. To determine whether the membrane composition of PV surrounding these different stages might contribute to differences in the outcome of infection, we identified selected membrane constituents by immunofluorescence and intracellular radioiodination, and studied their incorporation into PV. Complement receptors (CR3) are incorporated preferentially into the PV membrane surrounding serum-opsonized epimastigotes but not culture-derived metacyclic trypomastigotes. FcR are not preferentially incorporated into PV membranes unless epimastigotes or culture-derived metacyclic trypomastigotes are opsonized with anti-T. cruzi antibody. PV surrounding either parasite stage contain beta 1 integrins and lysosomal membrane glycoproteins (lgp). These results indicate that the plasma membrane glycoproteins incorporated into the surrounding PV membrane differ depending upon the stage of parasite being internalized, and that these differences reflect, at least in part, selective ligation of cell surface receptors mediating uptake. Furthermore, they imply that although virulent trypomastigote stages may avoid host cell uptake by conventional phagocytic receptors, i.e., CR3 or FcR, they do not escape fusion with an lgp-containing vacuole where they could still be exposed to lysosomal antimicrobial mechanisms.  相似文献   

17.
The asexual development of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is largely intraerythrocytic. When 1-palmitoyl-2-[6-[(7-nitro-2-1,3-benzoxadiazole-4-yl)amino]caproyl] phosphatidylcholine (NBD-PC) was incorporated into infected and uninfected erythrocyte membranes at 0 degrees C, it remained at the cell surface. At 10 degrees C, the lipid was rapidly internalized in infected erythrocytes at all stages of parasite growth. Our results indicate that the internalization of NDB-PC was not because of endocytosis but rapid transbilayer lipid flip-flop at the infected erythrocyte membrane, followed by monomer diffusion to the parasite. Internalization of the lipid was inhibited by (a) depleting cellular ATP levels; (b) pretreating the cells with N-ethyl maleimide or diethylpyrocarbonate; and (c) 10 mM L-alpha-glycerophosphorylcholine. The evidence suggests protein-mediated and energy dependent transmembrane movement of the PC analogue. The conditions for the internalization of another phospholipid analogue N-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazoledipalmitoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (N-NBD-PE) were distinct from that of NBD-PC and suggest the presence of additional mechanism(s) of parasite-mediated lipid transport in the infected host membrane. In spite of the lack of bulk, constitutive endocytosis at the red cell membrane, the uptake of Lucifer yellow by mature infected cells suggests that microdomains of pinocytotic activity are induced by the intracellular parasite. The results indicate the presence of parasite-induced mechanisms of lipid transport in infected erythrocyte membranes that modify host membrane properties and may have important implications on phospholipid asymmetry in these membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Intracellular genera are found in all the major groups of Protista, but are particularly common among the dinoflagellates, trypanosomatid zooflagellates and suctorian ciliates; the Sporozoa are nearly all intracellular at some stage of their life, and the Microspora entirely so. Intracellular forms can dwell in the nucleus, within phagosomal or other vacuoles or may lie free in the hyaloplasm of their host cells. Organisms tend to select their hosts from a restricted taxonomic range although there are some notable exceptions. There is also great variation in the types of host cell inhabited. There are various reasons for both host and cell selectivity including recognition phenomena at the cell surfaces. Invasion of host cells is usually preceded by surface interactions with the invader. Some organisms depend upon phagocytosis for entry, but others induce host cells to engulf them by non-phagocytic means or invade by microinjection through the host plasma membrane. Protista avoid lysosomal destruction by their resistance to enzyme attack, by surrounding themselves with lysosome-inhibiting vacuoles, by escaping from the phagosomal system into the hyaloplasm and by choosing host cells which lack lysosomes. Nutrition of intracellular heterotrophic organisms involves some degree of competition with the host cell's metabolism as well as erosion of host cell cytoplasm. In Plasmodium infections, red cells are made more permeable to required nutrients by the action of the parasite on the host cell membrane. The parasite is often dependent upon the host cell for complex nutrients which it cannot synthesize for itself. Intracellular forms often profoundly modify the structure and metabolism of the host cell or interfere with its growth and multiplication. This may result in the final lysis of the host cell at the end of the intracellular phase or before the infection of other cells. Certain types of intracellular organisms may have arisen initially as forms attached to the cell surface of digestive or other organs, but the intracellular habit appears to have arisen independently in several groups of Protista.  相似文献   

19.
Cell signalling and Trypanosoma cruzi invasion   总被引:1,自引:2,他引:1  
Mammalian cell invasion by the protozoan pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi is critical to its survival in the host. To promote its entry into a wide variety of non-professional phagocytic cells, infective trypomastigotes exploit an arsenal of heterogenous surface glycoproteins, secreted proteases and signalling agonists to actively manipulate multiple host cell signalling pathways. Signals initiated in the parasite upon contact with mammalian cells also function as critical regulators of the invasion process. Whereas the full spectrum of cellular responses modulated by T. cruzi is not yet known, mounting evidence suggests that these pathways impinge on a number of cellular processes, in particular the ubiquitous wound-repair mechanism exploited for lysosome-mediated parasite entry. Furthermore, differential engagement of host cell signalling pathways in a cell type-specific manner and modulation of host cell gene expression by T. cruzi are becoming recognized as essential determinants of infectivity and intracellular survival by this pathogen.  相似文献   

20.
Trogocytosis was originally thought to be restricted to the interaction of cells of the immune system with cancer cells. Such membrane exchanges are probably a general process in cell biology, and membrane exchange has been demonstrated to occur between non-immune cells within an organism. Herein, we report that membrane and protein exchange, consistent with trogocytosis, between Trypanosoma cruzi (both the Brazil and Tulahuen strains) and the mammalian cells it infects. Transfer of labeled membrane patches was monitored by labeling of either parasites or host cells, i.e. human foreskin fibroblasts and rat myoblasts. Trypomastigotes and amastigotes transferred specific surface glycoproteins to the host cells along with membranes. Exchange of membranes between the parasite and host cells occurred during successful invasion. Extracellular amastigotes did not transfer membrane patches and were did not transfer either membranes or proteins to the host cells. Membrane exchange was also found to occur between interacting epimastigotes in cell-free culture and may be important in parasite–parasite interactions as well. Further studies should provide new insights into pathogenesis and provide targets for therapeutic intervention.  相似文献   

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