High expression of a functional cruzipain by a non-infective and non-pathogenic Trypanosoma cruzi clone

Parasitology ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 117 (5) ◽  
pp. 483-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. N. PAIVA ◽  
T. SOUTO-PADRON ◽  
D. A. COSTA ◽  
C. R. GATTASS

We compared a Trypanosoma cruzi clone unable to infect or induce pathology in mice (CL-14), with virulent T. cruzi (Y and CL strains) in terms of cruzipain expression, subcellular distribution and functional activity. Our results showed that (1) intracellular Y amastigotes expressed R1 (carboxy-terminal) and R2 (catalytic) domains concentrated in cytoplasmic vesicles, while CL-14 presented R1 labelling on membrane clusters and R2 in intracellular compartments, (2) CL-14-trypomastigotes presented R1 and R2 staining preferentially on flagellar and cellular membranes, similar to CL, but different from Y strain intracellular labelling pattern, (3) flow-cytometry revealed higher expression of R1 by CL-14-trypomastigotes than virulent strains, but R2 staining similar to CL-trypomastigotes, (4) CL-14-trypomastigotes presented normal cruzipain activity in gelatin gels, but different banding patterns were found in CL-14 versus CL and Y strains. Our data rule out failure in cruzipain expression, activity or subcellular distribution as an explanation for CL-14 biological behaviour, but suggest the expression of a different isoform. These results also cast doubt on the putative role of cruzipain as a target of immunopathological responses, since high levels of functional cruzipain are expressed by a non-pathogenic T. cruzi.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jarmila Králová ◽  
Michal Jurášek ◽  
Lucie Mikšátková ◽  
Anna Marešová ◽  
Jan Fähnrich ◽  
...  

AbstractFluorescent sterol probes, comprising a fluorophore connected to a sterol backbone by means of a linker, are promising tools for enabling high-resolution imaging of intracellular cholesterol. In this study, we evaluated how the size of the linker, site of its attachment and nature of the fluorophore, affect the localization and trafficking properties of fluorescent sterol probes. Varying lengths of linker using the same fluorophore affected cell penetration and retention in specific cell compartments. A C-4 linker was confirmed as optimal. Derivatives of heterocyclic sterol precursors attached with identical C-4 linker to different fluorophores at diverse positions also showed significant differences in their binding properties to various intracellular compartments and kinetics of trafficking. Two novel red-emitting probes with good cell permeability, fast intracellular labelling and slightly different distribution displayed very promising characteristics for sterol probes. These probes also strongly labelled endo/lysosomal compartment in cells with pharmacologically disrupted cholesterol transport, or with a genetic mutation of cholesterol transporting protein NPC1, that overlapped with filipin staining of cholesterol. Overall, the present study demonstrates that the physicochemical properties of the fluorophore/linker pairing determine the kinetics of uptake and distribution and subsequently influence the applicability of final probes.


1995 ◽  
Vol 182 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Ferrari ◽  
M J Levin ◽  
G Wallukat ◽  
R Elies ◽  
D Lebesgue ◽  
...  

Sera from chagasic patients possess antibodies recognizing the carboxy-terminal part of the ribosomal P0 protein of Trypanosoma cruzi and the second extracellular loop of the human beta 1-adrenergic receptor. Comparison of both peptides showed that they contain a pentapeptide with very high homology (AESEE in P0 and AESDE in the human beta 1-adrenergic receptor). Using a competitive immunoenzyme assay, recognition of the peptide corresponding to the second extracellular loop (H26R) was inhibited by both P0-14i (AAAESEEEDDDDDF) and P0-beta (AESEE). Concomitantly, recognition of P0-beta was inhibited with the H26R peptide. Recognition of P0 in Western blots was inhibited by P0-14i, P0-beta, and H26R, but not by a peptide corresponding to the second extracellular loop of the human beta 2-adrenergic receptor or by an unrelated peptide. Autoantibodies affinity purified with the immobilized H26R peptide were shown to exert a positive chronotropic effect in vitro on cardiomyocytes from neonatal rats. This effect was blocked by both the specific beta 1 blocker bisoprolol and the peptide P0-beta. These results unambiguously prove that T. cruzi is able to induce a functional autoimmune response against the cardiovascular human beta 1-adrenergic receptor through a molecular mimicry mechanism.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matías Exequiel Rodríguez ◽  
Mariana Rizzi ◽  
Lucas D. Caeiro ◽  
Yamil E. Masip ◽  
Alina Perrone ◽  
...  

AbstractChaga’ disease, caused by the kinetoplastid parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, presents a variety of chronic clinical manifestations whose determinants are still unknown but probably influenced by the host-parasite interplay established during the first stages of the infection, when bloodstream circulating trypomastigotes disseminate to different organs and tissues. After leaving the blood, trypomastigotes must migrate through tissues to invade cells and establish a chronic infection. How this process occurs remains unexplored. Three-dimensional (3D) cultures are physiologically relevant because mimic the microarchitecture of tissues and provide an environment similar to the encountered in natural infections. In this work, we combined the 3D culture technology with host-pathogen interaction, by studying transmigration of trypomastigotes into 3D spheroids. T. cruzi strains with similar infection dynamics in 2D monolayer cultures but with different in vivo behavior (CL Brener, virulent; SylvioX10 no virulent) presented different infection rates in spheroids (CL Brener ∼40%, SylvioX10 <10%). Confocal microscopy images evidenced that trypomastigotes from CL Brener and other highly virulent strains presented a great ability to transmigrate inside 3D spheroids: as soon as 4 hours post infection parasites were found at 50 µm in depth inside the spheroids. CL Brener trypomastigotes were evenly distributed and systematically observed in the space between cells, suggesting a paracellular route of transmigration to deepen into the spheroids. On the other hand, poor virulent strains presented a weak migratory capacity and remained in the external layers of spheroids (<10µm) with a patch-like distribution pattern. The invasiveness -understood as the ability to transmigrate deep into spheroids- was not a transferable feature between strains, neither by soluble or secreted factors nor by co-cultivation of trypomastigotes from invasive and non-invasive strains. We also studied the transmigration of recent T. cruzi isolates from children that were born congenitally infected, which showed a high migrant phenotype while an isolate form an infected mother (that never transmitted the infection to any of her 3 children) was significantly less migratory. Altogether, our results demonstrate that in a 3D microenvironment each strain presents a characteristic migration pattern and distribution of parasites in the spheroids that can be associated to their in vivo behavior. Certainly, the findings presented here could not have been studied with traditional 2D monolayer cultures.Author SummaryTrypanosoma cruzi is the protozoan parasite that causes Chaga’ disease, also known as American trypanosomiasis. Experimental models of the infection evidence that different strains of the parasite present different virulence in the host, which cannot be always reproduced in 2D monolayer cultures. Three dimensional (3D) cultures can be useful models to study complex host-parasite interactions because they mimic in vitro the microarchitecture of tissues and provide an environment similar to the encountered in natural infections. In particular, spheroids are small 3D aggregates of cells that interact with each other and with the extracellular matrix that they secrete resembling the original microenvironment both functionally and structurally. Spheroids have rarely been employed to explore infectious diseases and host-parasite interactions. In this work we studied how bloodstream trypomastigotes transmigrate through 3D spheroids mimicking the picture encountered by parasites in tissues soon after leaving circulation. We showed that the behavior of T. cruzi trypomastigotes in 3D cultures reflects their in vivo virulence: virulent strains transmigrate deeply into spheroids while non-virulent strains remain in the external layers of spheroids. Besides, this work demonstrates the usefulness of 3D cultures as an accurate in vitro model for the study of host-pathogen interactions that could not be addressed with conventional monolayer cultures.


2001 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael A Martínez-Díaz ◽  
José A Escario ◽  
Juan J Nogal-Ruiz ◽  
Alicia Gómez-Barrio

1988 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor T. Contreras ◽  
Tania C. de Araújo-Jorge ◽  
Myrna C. Bonaldo ◽  
Neide Thomaz ◽  
Helena S. Barbosa ◽  
...  

The biological characterization of the Trypanosoma cruzi clone Dm 28c in terms of its growth in LIT medium, cell-cycle, infectivity to mice and interaction with professional and non-professional phagocytic cells shows that it behaves as a bona fide T. cruzi representant. The biological properties of this myotropic clone do not change according to the origin of the trypomastigote forms (i. e., from triatomines, infected mice, cell-culture or from the chemically defined TAUP and TAU3AAG media). In addition Dm 28c metacyclic trypomastigotes from TAU3AAG medium display a high infectivity level to fibroblasts and muscle cells. Experiments on binding of cationized ferritin to trypomastigotes surface show the existence of cap-like structures of ferritin in regions near the kinetoplast. However the nature and role of these anionic sites remain to be determined. The results indicate that metacyclic trypomastigotes from Dm 28c clone obtained under chemically defined conditions reproduce the biological behaviour of T. cruzi, rendering this system very suitable for the study of cell-parasite interactions and for the isolation of trypanosome relevant macromolecules.


1992 ◽  
Vol 176 (1) ◽  
pp. 201-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y A Skeiky ◽  
D R Benson ◽  
M Parsons ◽  
K B Elkon ◽  
S G Reed

Chagas' disease, caused by the intracellular protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, is a major cause of heart failure in endemic areas. Antigenic mimicry by T. cruzi antigens sharing epitopes with host macromolecules has been implicated in the pathogenesis which is thought to have a significant autoimmune component. We report herein on the cloning and characterization of a full-length cDNA from a T. cruzi expression library encoding a protein, TcP0, that is homologous to the human 38-kD ribosomal phosphoprotein HuP0. The T. cruzi P0 protein shows a clustering of residues that are evolutionarily conserved in higher eukaryotes. This includes an alanine- and glycine-rich region adjacent to a highly charged COOH terminus. This "hallmark" domain is the basis of the crossreactivity of the highly immunogenic eukaryotic P protein family. We found that T. cruzi-infected individuals have antibodies reacting with host (self) P proteins, as well as with recombinant TcP0. Deletion of the six carboxy-terminal amino acids abolished the reactivity of the T. cruzi infection sera with TcP0. This is similar to the specificity of anti-P autoantibodies described for a subset of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) (Elkon, K., E. Bonfa, R. Llovet, W. Danho, H. Weissbach, and N. Brot. 1988. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 85:5186). These results suggest that T. cruzi P proteins may contribute to the development of autoreactive antibodies in Chagas' disease, and that the underlying mechanisms of anti-P autoantibody may be similar in Chagas' and SLE patients. This study represents the first definitive report of the cloning of a full-length T. cruzi antigen that mimics a characterized host homologue in structure, function, and shared antigenicity.


2010 ◽  
Vol 54 (6) ◽  
pp. 2540-2548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandrine Lemaire ◽  
Paul M. Tulkens ◽  
Françoise Van Bambeke

ABSTRACT Radezolid (RX-1741) is the first biaryloxazolidinone in clinical development. It shows improved activity, including against linezolid-resistant strains. Radezolid differs from linezolid by the presence of a biaryl spacer and of a heteroaryl side chain, which increases the ionization and hydrophilicity of the molecule at physiological pH and confers to it a dibasic character. The aim of this study was to determine the accumulation and subcellular distribution of radezolid in phagocytic cells and to decipher the underlying mechanisms. In THP-1 human macrophages, J774 mouse macrophages, and human polymorphonuclear neutrophils, radezolid accumulated rapidly and reversibly (half-lives of approximately 6 min and 9 min for uptake and efflux, respectively) to reach, at equilibrium, a cellular concentration 11-fold higher than the extracellular one. This process was concentration and energy independent but pH dependent (accumulation was reduced to 20 to 30% of control values for cells in medium at a pH of <6 or in the presence of monensin, which collapses pH gradients between the extracellular and intracellular compartments). The accumulation at equilibrium was not affected by efflux pump inhibitors (verapamil and gemfibrozil) and was markedly reduced at 4°C but was further increased in medium with low serum content. Subcellular fractionation studies demonstrated a dual subcellular distribution for radezolid, with ∼60% of the drug colocalizing to the cytosol and ∼40% to the lysosomes, with no specific association with mitochondria. These observations are compatible with a mechanism of transmembrane diffusion of the free fraction and partial segregation of radezolid in lysosomes by proton trapping, as previously described for macrolides.


2008 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 152-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Antonio Nogueira Nascentes ◽  
Wendell Sérgio Ferreira Meira ◽  
Eliane Lages-Silva ◽  
Luis Eduardo Ramírez

This study evaluated the possibility of inoculation and reinoculation with a trypanosomatid isolated from bats that is morphologically, biologically and molecularly similar to Trypanosoma cruzi, to protect against infection by virulent strains. Non-isogenic mice were divided into 24 groups that received from zero to three inoculations of Trypanosoma cruzi-like strain RM1, in the presence or absence of Freund's adjuvant, and were challenged with the VIC or JG strains of Trypanosoma cruzi. Parasitemia and survival were monitored and animals were sacrificed for histopathological analysis. Animals immunized with Trypanosoma cruzi-like strain RM1 presented decreased parasitemia, independently of the number of inoculations or the presence of adjuvant. In spite of this reduction, these animals did not present any protection against histopathological lesions. Severe eosinophilic infiltrate was observed and was correlated with the number of inoculations of Trypanosoma cruzi-like strain RM1. These findings suggest that prior inoculation with this strain did not protect against infection but, rather, aggravated the tissue inflammatory process.


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