Article
Cell death induction in Giardia lamblia: effect of beta-lapachone and starvation
Registro en:
CORRÊA, Gladys et al. Cell death induction in Giardia lamblia: Effect of beta-lapachone and starvation. Parasitology International, v. 58, p. 424-437, Aug. 2009.
1383-5769
10.1016/j.parint.2009.08.006
1873-0329
Autor
Corrêa, Gladys
Vilela, Ricardo
Menna-Barreto, Rubem F. S.
Midlej, Victor
Benchimol, Marlene
Resumen
Giardia lamblia is a protozoan that parasitizes the small intestine of vertebrates. It is a cause of intestinal infection and diarrhea and infects millions of people worldwide. This protozoan presents many characteristics common to eukaryotic cells but it lacks organelles found in most eukaryotes (e.g., peroxisomes, typical Golgi complex and mitochondria). Also it presents mitosomes, a relic organelle that appears to be a mitochondrial remnant. Cell death in Giardia was induced by the drug beta-Lapachone and by starvation. Giardia behavior was followed by scanning, transmission and fluorescence microscopy, quantification of cell metabolism using MTT (3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5 diphenyltetrazolium bromide), changes in lipid rafts, using DiIC(16) and cholera toxin. Cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation, membrane blebbing and vacuolization provided ultrastructural evidence of apoptosis, whereas the myelinic figures in large vacuoles and LC-3 staining suggested an autophagic process. Lipids rafts were altered by drug treatment and co-localized with regions containing membrane blebbing. The treatment with beta-Lap induced encystation. A search for sequence similarities in databases and protein alignments was carried out. Although Giardia is an amitochondrial organism, it presented some autophagic-like cell death characteristics and several, but not all, apoptotic characteristics, induced by beta-Lapachone and starvation. 2030-01-01