I. Extracellular Cultivation and Morphological Characterization of Amastigote-Like Forms of Leishmania panamensis and L. braziliensis |
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Authors: | SIMONE EPERON DIANE McMAHON-PRATT |
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Institution: | Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Room 715, 60 College Street, New Haven. Connecticut 06510 |
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Abstract: | . Two strains of the Leishmania braziliensis complex have been adapted to grow extracellularly at elevated temperature as amastigote-like forms in a cell-free medium. These parasites can be serially cultivated and maintained at 32°C for L. panamensis (WR442; L. braziliensis panamensis ) and at 28°C for L. braziliensis (M5052; L. braziliensis braziliensis ). Several observations are presented that the forms adapted at elevated temperature are amastigote-like. Morphologically, the amastigote-like organisms appear rounded to ovoid and are immotile and smaller than promastigotes; the flagellum of the amastigote-like forms does not extend beyond the flagellar pocket. In comparison, the promastigotes are very elongated, with a nucleus at mid-cell length and a very long flagellum. By electron microscopy, the short flagellum of the amastigote-like form is within a distended flagellar pocket; the 9 + 2 axonemal configuration is present but the paraxial rod is not observed. By contrast, the flagellum of the promastigote has a paraxial rod which extends from the axosome level. In addition, these amastigote-like forms of Leishmania are able to infect, to survive and to divide within the macrophage cell line J774. |
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Keywords: | Light microscropy infection of macrophages transmission electron microscopy |
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