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1.
Bloodstream Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes isolated from infected mice undergo reduction of motility and structural damages after 5 to 45 min exposure to gossypol at concentrations ranging from 5 to 50 μM. When 1% serum albumin is added to the incubation medium, no alterations of parasites are observed, even with 100 μM gossypol. Intracellular T. cruzi amastigotes in infected Vero cell cultures exposed to 5 μM gossypol for 2 h do not show changes. Incubation with 5 μM gossypol for 48 h produces complete disruption of host cells; however, the amastigotes they contain show only mineor alterations. The observations indicate that, in protein-rich media, gossypol is complexed into associations which have no activity on the different forms of the T. cruzi biological cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Tachyzoites of Toxoplasma gondii multiply within the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) until the lysis of the host cell. This study was undertaken to evaluate the effect of hydroxyurea (a specific drug that arrests cell division at G1/S phase) on the multiplication of T. gondii tachyzoites in infected Vero cells. Infected host cells were treated with hydroxyurea for periods varying from 5 to 48 h, and the survival and morphology of the parasite were determined. Hydroxyurea arrested intracellular T. gondii multiplication in all periods tested. After 48 h of incubation with hydroxyurea, intracellular parasites were not easily observed in Vero cells. Ultrastructural observations showed that infected host cells treated with hydroxyurea for 24 h or more presented disrupted intracellular parasites within the PV. However, the host cells exhibited a normal morphology. Our observations suggest that hydroxyurea was able to interfere with the cycle of the intracellular parasite, leading to the complete destruction of the T. gondii without affecting the host cells.  相似文献   

3.
In order to replicate, many parasites must invade host cells. Changes in the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) of different parasites and tissue culture cells during their interaction have been studied. An increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) in Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes occurs after association of the parasites with host cells. Ca(2+) mobilization in the host cells also takes place upon contact with T. cruzi trypomastigotes, Leishmania donovani amastigotes or Plasmodium falciparum merozoites. When Ca(2+) transients are prevented by intracellular Ca(2+) chelators, a decrease in parasite association to host cells is observed. This reveals the importance of [Ca(2+)](i) in the process of parasite-host cell interaction, as discussed here by Roberto Docampo and Silvia Moreno.  相似文献   

4.
We examined in this work whether rTNF inhibits the capacity of Trypanosoma cruzi to multiply within murine macrophages or enhances the ability of the phagocytic host cells to destroy internalized parasites. We found that rTNF would not alter the fate of the trypanosomes within macrophages over a 48-h incubation period unless the latter cells were also treated with 1 ng/ml bacterial endotoxin (LPS). Treatment of macrophages with rTNF plus LPS, but not separate treatment with either rTNF or LPS, resulted in a significant decrease in the number of organisms per 100 macrophages with respect to values obtained with mock-treated macrophages. In addition, there was a significant reduction in the proportion of infected macrophages over the 48-h incubation period, indicating parasite clearance by the host cells. The combined effects of rTNF and LPS were seen when macrophages from CBA/J were used but not with LPS-insensitive macrophages from C3H/HeJ mice. Increased trypanosome killing by CBA/J macrophages treated with rTNF plus LPS was not seen when catalase was present in the culture medium, indicating a role for hydrogen peroxide in the cytotoxic effect. These results show that rTNF can affect the fate of T. cruzi within macrophages if LPS is present and point to destruction of internalized organisms rather than inhibition of parasite multiplication as the most likely explanation.  相似文献   

5.
Bloodstream Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes isolated from infected mice undergo reduction of motility and structural damages after 5 to 45 min exposure to gossypol at concentrations ranging from 5 to 50 microM. When 1% serum albumin is added to the incubation medium, no alterations of parasites are observed, even with 100 microM gossypol. Intracellular T. cruzi amastigotes in infected Vero cell cultures exposed to 5 microM gossypol for 2 h do not show changes. Incubation with 5 microM gossypol for 48 h produces complete disruption of host cells; however, the amastigotes they contain show only minor alterations. The observations indicate that, in protein-rich media, gossypol is complexed into associations which have no activity on the different forms of the T. cruzi biological cycle.  相似文献   

6.
A method is described for the isolation and purification of trypomastigotes and amastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi from cell cultures. L-A9, a transformed fibroblast cell line, and J774G8, a macrophage-like cell line of tumor origin, were used. Both cell lines were infected with bloodstream trypomastigotes of T. cruzi, which once within host cells transform into dividing amastigotes. After 6--8 days infection the host cells ruptured, spontaneously liberating parasites into the culture medium. L-A9 cells liberated mainly trypomastigotes while J774G8 cells liberated amastigotes. The parasites were collected and purified by centrifugation in a gradient of metrizamide. The purity of the preparation as well as the morphology of the parasites and the host cells were analysed by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

7.
In order to invade mammalian cells, Trypanosoma cruzi infective forms cause distinct rearrangements of membrane and host cell cytoskeletal components. Rho GTPases have been shown to regulate three separate signal transduction pathways, linking plasma membrane receptors to the assembly of distinct actin filament structures. Here, we examined the role of Rho GTPases on the interaction between different T. cruzi infective forms of strains from the two major phylogenetic lineages with nonpolarized MDCK cells transfected with different Rho GTPase constructs. We compared the infectivity of amastigotes isolated from infected cells (intracellular amastigotes) with forms generated from the axenic differentiation of trypomastigotes (extracellular amastigotes), and also with metacyclic trypomastigotes. No detectable effect of GTPase expression was observed on metacyclic trypomastigote invasion and parasites of Y and CL (T. cruzi II) strains invaded to similar degrees all MDCK transfectants, and were more infective than either G or Tulahuen (T. cruzi I) strains. Intracellular amastigotes were complement sensitive and showed very low infectivity towards the different transfectants regardless of the parasite strain. Complement-resistant T. cruzi I extracellular amastigotes, especially of the G strain, were more infective than T. cruzi II parasites, particularly for the Rac1V12 constitutively active GTPase transfectant. The fact that in Rac1N17 dominant-negative cells, the invasion of G strain extracellular amastigotes was specifically inhibited suggested an important role for Rac1 in this process.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract Three proteinase inhibitors, one peptidyl acyloxymethyl ketone (AMK), Z-Phe-Lys-CH2-OCO-(2,4,6-Me3)Ph.HCl, and two diazomethyl ketones (DMKs), Z-Phe-Phe-DMK and Z-Phe-Ala-DMK, have been studied for their effects in vitro on the four developmental stages of Trypanosoma cruzi . The three inhibitors penetrated living parasites and inhibited the major cysteine proteinase, cruzipain. The AMK was the most potent inhibitor of cruzipain itself and at 20 μM caused lysis of epimastigotes and trypomastigotes. When at lower concentrations, however, it had little effect on epimastigote growth but reduced metacyclogenesis. The DMKs had no effect against epimastigotes but inhibited differentiation to metacyclics. All three inhibitors markedly reduced infection of Vero cells by the parasite and the multiplication of the intracellular amastigotes, whereas release of trypomastigotes was almost entirely prevented. The results confirm the importance of cysteine proteinases in the life cycle of T. cruzi , and suggest that the differentiation steps are the most susceptible to cysteine proteinase inhibitors.  相似文献   

9.
A method is described for the isolation and purification of the intracellular amastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi from cultured Vero cells. Host cells were infected with metacyclic forms obtained in Grace's medium. Six days after infection, the cells wer subjected to treatment with trypsin to obtain the intracellular forms. The parasites were collected and purified by Percoll discontinuous gradient centrifugation.  相似文献   

10.
Multiple signal transduction events are triggered in the host cell during invasion by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. Here, we report the regulation of host cell phosphatydilinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) activities by T. cruzi during parasite-host cell interaction. Treatment of nonphagocytic cells (Vero, L(6)E(9), and NIH 3T3) and phagocytic cells (human and J774 murine macrophages) with the selective PI3K inhibitors Wortmannin and LY294002 significantly impaired parasite invasion in a dose-dependent fashion. A strong activation of PI3K and PKB/Akt activities in Vero cells was detected when these cells were incubated with trypomastigotes or their isolated membranes. Consistently, we were unable to detect activation of PI3K or PKB/Akt activities in host cells during epimastigote (noninfective) membrane-host cell interaction. Infection of transiently transfected cells containing an inactive mutant PKB showed a significant inhibition of invasion compared with the active mutant-transfected cells. T. cruzi PI3K-like activity was also required in host cell invasion since treatment of trypomastigotes with PI3K inhibitors prior to infection reduced parasite entry. Taken together, these results indicate that PI3K and PKB/Akt activation in parasites, as in host cells induced by T. cruzi, is an early invasion signal required for successful trypomastigote internalization.  相似文献   

11.
Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas' disease, is an obligatory intracellular parasite in the mammalian host. In order to invade a wide variety of mammalian cells, T. cruzi engages parasite components that are differentially expressed among strains and infective forms. Because the identification of putative protein receptors has been particularly challenging, we investigated whether cholesterol and membrane rafts, sterol- and sphingolipid-enriched membrane domains, could be general host surface components involved in invasion of metacyclic trypomastigotes and extracellular amastigotes of two parasite strains with distinct infectivities. HeLa or Vero cells treated with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD) are less susceptible to invasion by both infective forms, and the effect was dose-dependent for trypomastigote but not amastigote invasion. Moreover, treatment of parasites with MbetaCD only inhibited trypomastigote invasion. Filipin labeling confirmed that host cell cholesterol concentrated at the invasion sites. Binding of a cholera toxin B subunit (CTX-B) to ganglioside GM1, a marker of membrane rafts, inhibited parasite infection. Cell labeling with CTX-B conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate revealed that not only cholesterol but also GM1 is implicated in parasite entry. These findings thus indicate that microdomains present in mammalian cell membranes, that are enriched in cholesterol and GM1, are involved in invasion by T. cruzi infective forms.  相似文献   

12.
A mouse monoclonal anti-alpha-tubulin antibody was used to investigate the disposition of the cytoskeletal microtubules of three tissue culture cell lines--J774 macrophages, BSC-1, and Vero cells--infected with the Brazil strain of Trypanosoma cruzi. Indirect immunofluorescence light microscopy was used to demonstrate the antigenic response in host cells and parasites, simultaneously. In all morphotypes of T. cruzi, the monoclonal antibody reacted with all subpopulations of microtubules, inclusively, the subpellicular, flagellar, cytopharyngeal, and mitotic. The host cell cytoskeletal microtubule framework was revealed and the redistribution and destruction of the microtubular lattice in response to parasite infection over a 120 h period recorded. Our results show that after the initial inoculation of tissue cultures with trypomastigotes, the parasites penetrate the cells and locate in the perinuclear region of the cell where they multiply. The number and distribution of host cell microtubules were altered during the infection. The normal radial distribution of microtubules extending from the center of the cell to the periphery was destroyed. The remaining microtubules were observed at the periphery encircling, but well removed from the proliferating parasites. The complete transformation of the parasites was monitored throughout the infection with the end result being the liberation of parasites and the near complete destruction of the microtubular framework of the host cell. A residual population of dividing spheromastigotes was observed in cells liberating trypomastigotes. Colloidal gold labeling of thin sections as seen in the electron microscope affirmed the specificity of our monoclonal antibody to all subpopulations of microtubules in T. cruzi.  相似文献   

13.
The uptake of bloodstream forms of Trypanosoma cruzi, Y and CL stocks, by mouse peritoneal macrophages and their intracellular differentiation and multiplication has been compared in vitro. After 48 h the number of macrophages showing intracellular amastigote forms was higher when the Y stock was used. The number of parasitized cells increased with the time of contact between parasites and macrophages. Prior treatment of the parasites with anti-T. cruzi antibodies and/or complement increased the number of infected macrophages, but did not interfere with their subsequent differentiation within the macrophages. The number of parasitized cells was greater when macrophages were obtained from mice previously treated with lipopolysaccharide, peptone or thioglycollate. Uptake was not appreciably affected when macrophages were pre-treated with trypsin or anti-macrophage serum, or when the parasites and macrophages were incubated in the presence of cytochalasin B. In the same experimental conditions, epimastigotes of T. cruzi when not able to differentiate into amastigotes. Their uptake was potentiated by previous treatment with specific antibodies and/or complement and was blocked by cytochalasin B. These results confirm that epimastigotes derived from T. cruzi cultures are phagocytosed and suggest that bloodstream forms penetrate actively into macrophages.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work has shown that Trypanosoma cruzi extracellular amastigotes as well as metacyclic trypomastigotes infect cultured cells in a highly specific parasite form-cell type interaction. In this work we have investigated the mode of interaction of both forms with HeLa and Vero cells using scanning electron and confocal fluorescence microscopy. We examined the distribution of several host cell components as well as extracellular matrix elements during cell invasion by both T. cruzi infective forms. Scanning electron microscopy showed that membrane expansions formed during the invasion of cells by extracellular amastigotes. These expansions correspond to small cup-like structures in HeLa cells and are comparatively larger "crater"-like in Vero cells. We detected by confocal microscopy actin-rich structures associated with the internalisation of both infective forms of the parasite that correspond to the membrane expansions. Confocal fluorescence microscopy combining DIC images of cells labelled with monoclonal antibodies to phosphotyrosine, cytoskeletal elements, integrins, and extracellular matrix components revealed that some of the components like gelsolin and alpha-actinin accumulate in actin-rich structures formed in the invasion of amastigotes of both cell types. Others, like vinculin and alpha2 integrin may be present in these structures without evident accumulation. And finally, some actin-rich processes may be devoid of components like fibronectin or alphaV integrin. These studies provide evidence that the repertoire of host cell/extracellular matrix components that engage in the invasion process of T. cruzi forms is cell type- and parasite form-dependent.  相似文献   

15.
In this study we have examined certain aspects of the process of cell invasion and parasitophorous vacuole escape by metacyclic trypomastigotes and extracellular amastigote forms of Trypanosoma cruzi (G strain). Using Vero (and HeLa) cells as targets, we detected differences in the kinetics of vacuole escape by the two forms. Alcalinization of intercellular pH influenced both invasion as well as the escape from the parasitophorous vacuole by metacyclic trypomastigotes, but not the escape kinetics of extracellular amastigotes. We used sialic acid mutants as target cells and observed that the deficiency of this molecule facilitated the escape of both infective forms. Hemolysin activity was only detected in extracellular amastigotes and neither form presented detectable transialidase activity. Invasion of extracellular amastigotes and trypomastigotes in Vero cells was affected in different ways by drugs that interfere with host cell Ca2+ mobilization. These results are in line with previous results that indicate that metacyclic trypomastigotes and extracellular amastigote forms utilize mechanisms with particular features to invade host cells and to escape from their parasitophorous vacuoles.  相似文献   

16.
Membrane fragments from trypomastigote forms of Trypanosoma cruzi inhibited the association of intact trypomastigotes with rat heart myoblasts whereas a similar preparation from non-invasive epimastigotes did not. Furthermore, killed trypomastigotes bound to the host cell surface and prevented the attachment of living organisms. Conversely, the extent of association of killed parasites with the host cells was reduced by the presence of living flagellates. These results suggest the presence of a distinct structure(s) on the surface of rat heart myoblasts to which infective forms of T. cruzi can bind.  相似文献   

17.
Membrane fragments from trypomastigote forms of Trypanosoma cruzi inhibited the association of intact trypomas- tigotes with rat heart myoblasts whereas a similar preparation from non-invasive epimastigotes did not. Furthermore, killed trypo- mastigotes bound to the host cell surface and prevented the attachment of living organisms. Conversely, the extent of association of killed parasites with the host cells was reduced by the presence of living flagellates. These results suggest the presence of a distinct structure(s) on the surface of rat heart myoblasts to which infective forms of T. cruzi can bind.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Different strains of Trypanosoma cruzi were transfected with an expression vector that allows the integration of green fluorescent protein (GFP) and red fluorescent protein (RFP) genes into the beta-tubulin locus by homologous recombination. The sites of integration of the GFP and RFP markers were determined by pulse-field gel electrophoresis and Southern blot analyses. Cloned cell lines selected from transfected epimastigote populations maintained high levels of fluorescent protein expression even after 6 months of in vitro culture of epimastigotes in the absence of drug selection. Fluorescent trypomastigotes and amastigotes were observed within Vero cells in culture as well as in hearts and diaphragms of infected mice. The infectivity of the GFP- and RFP-expressing parasites in tissue culture cells was comparable to wild type populations. Furthermore, GFP- and RFP-expressing parasites were able to produce similar levels of parasitemia in mice compared with wild type parasites. Cell cultures infected simultaneously with two cloned cell lines from the same parasite strain, each one expressing a distinct fluorescent marker, showed that at least two different parasites are able to infect the same cell. Double-infected cells were also detected when GFP- and RFP-expressing parasites were derived from strains belonging to two distinct T. cruzi lineages. These results show the usefulness of parasites expressing GFP and RFP for the study of various aspects of T. cruzi infection including the mechanisms of cell invasion, genetic exchange among parasites and the differential tissue distribution in animal models of Chagas disease.  相似文献   

20.
Trypanosoma cruzi is the causative agent of Chagas' disease. Novel chemotherapy with the drug K11777 targets the major cysteine protease cruzain and disrupts amastigote intracellular development. Nevertheless, the biological role of the protease in infection and pathogenesis remains unclear as cruzain gene knockout failed due to genetic redundancy. A role for the T. cruzi cysteine protease cruzain in immune evasion was elucidated in a comparative study of parental wild type- and cruzain-deficient parasites. Wild type T. cruzi did not activate host macrophages during early infection (<60 min) and no increase in ~P iκB was detected. The signaling factor NF-κB P65 colocalized with cruzain on the cell surface of intracellular wild type parasites, and was proteolytically cleaved. No significant IL-12 expression occurred in macrophages infected with wild type T. cruzi and treated with LPS and BFA, confirming impairment of macrophage activation pathways. In contrast, cruzain-deficient parasites induced macrophage activation, detectable iκB phosphorylation, and nuclear NF-κB P65 localization. These parasites were unable to develop intracellularly and survive within macrophages. IL 12 expression levels in macrophages infected with cruzain-deficient T. cruzi were comparable to LPS activated controls. Thus cruzain hinders macrophage activation during the early (<60 min) stages of infection, by interruption of the NF-κB P65 mediated signaling pathway. These early events allow T. cruzi survival and replication, and may lead to the spread of infection in acute Chagas' disease.  相似文献   

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