Article
Cooperation between apoptotic and viable metacyclics enhances the pathogenesis of Leishmaniasis.
Registro en:
WANDERLEY, J. L. M. et al. Cooperation between apoptotic and viable metacyclics enhances the pathogenesis of Leishmaniasis. PLoS One, v. 4, n. 5, p. e5733, 2009.
1932-6203
10.1371/journal.pone.0005733
Autor
Wanderley, João Luiz Mendes
Silva, Lucia Helena Pinto da
Deolindo, Poliana
Soong, Lynn
Borges, Valeria de Matos
Prates, Deboraci Brito
Souza, Ana Paula Almeida de
Barral, Aldina Maria Prado
Balanco, José Mario de Freitas
Nascimento, Michelle Tanny Cunha do
Saraiva, Elvira Maria B
Barcinski, Marcello André
Resumen
Mimicking mammalian apoptotic cells by exposing phosphatidylserine (PS) is a strategy used by virus and parasitic protozoa
to escape host protective inflammatory responses. With Leishmania amazonensis (La), apoptotic mimicry is a prerogative of
the intramacrophagic amastigote form of the parasite and is modulated by the host. Now we show that differently from
what happens with amastigotes, promastigotes exposing PS are non-viable, non-infective cells, undergoing apoptotic
death. As part of the normal metacyclogenic process occurring in axenic cultures and in the gut of sand fly vectors, a subpopulation
of metacyclic promastigotes exposes PS. Apoptotic death of the purified PS-positive (PSPOS) sub-population was
confirmed by TUNEL staining and DNA laddering. Transmission electron microscopy revealed morphological alterations in
PSPOS metacyclics such as DNA condensation, cytoplasm degradation and mitochondrion and kinetoplast destruction, both
in in vitro cultures and in sand fly guts. TUNELPOS promastigotes were detected only in the anterior midgut to foregut
boundary of infected sand flies. Interestingly, caspase inhibitors modulated parasite death and PS exposure, when added to
parasite cultures in a specific time window. Efficient in vitro macrophage infections and in vivo lesions only occur when
PSPOS and PS-negative (PSNEG) parasites were simultaneously added to the cell culture or inoculated in the mammalian host.
The viable PSNEG promastigote was the infective form, as shown by following the fate of fluorescently labeled parasites,
while the PSPOS apoptotic sub-population inhibited host macrophage inflammatory response. PS exposure and macrophage
inhibition by a subpopulation of promastigotes is a different mechanism than the one previously described with
amastigotes, where the entire population exposes PS. Both mechanisms co-exist and play a role in the transmission and
development of the disease in case of infection by La. Since both processes confer selective advantages to the infective
microorganism they justify the occurrence of apoptotic features in a unicellular pathogen.