Article
Differential ability to resist to complement lysis and invade host cells mediated by MBL in R4 and 860 strains of Trypanosoma cruzi
Registro en:
EVAN-OSSES, Ingrid et al. Differential ability to resist to complement lysis and invade host cells mediated by MBL in R4 and 860 strains of Trypanosoma cruzi. FEBS Letters v.588, n.6, p.956–961, 2014.
0014-5793
10.1016/j.febslet.2014.01.054
Autor
Evan-Osses, Ingrid
Mojoli, Andres
Beltrame, Marcia Holsbach
Costa, Denise Endo da
Rocha, Wanderson Duarte da
Velavan, Thirumalaisamy O
Reason, Iara de Messias
Ramirez, Marcel Ivan
Resumen
To produce an infection Trypanosoma cruzi must evade lysis by the complement system. During early stages of infection, the lectin pathway plays an important role in host defense and can be activated by binding of mannan-binding lectin (MBL) to carbohydrates on the surface of pathogens. We hypothesized that MBL has a dual role during parasite-host cell interaction as lectin complement pathway activator and as binding molecule to invade the host cell. We used two polarized strains of T. cruzi, R4 (susceptible) and 860 (resistant) strains, to investigate the role of MBL in complement-mediated lysis. Interestingly R4, but not 860 metacyclic strain, markedly increases the invasion of host cells, suggesting that MBL drives the invasion process while the parasite deactivates the Lectin complement pathway.