Leishmania Promastigotes Lack Phosphatidylserine but Bind Annexin V upon Permeabilization or Miltefosine Treatment


Autoria(s): Weingaertner, Adrien; Kemmer, Gerdi; Mueller, Frederic D.; Zampieri, Ricardo Andrade; Santos, Marcos Gonzaga dos; Schiller, Juergen; Pomorski, Thomas Guenther
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

01/11/2013

01/11/2013

02/08/2013

Resumo

The protozoan parasite Leishmania is an intracellular pathogen infecting and replicating inside vertebrate host macrophages. A recent model suggests that promastigote and amastigote forms of the parasite mimic mammalian apoptotic cells by exposing phosphatidylserine (PS) at the cell surface to trigger their phagocytic uptake into host macrophages. PS presentation at the cell surface is typically analyzed using fluorescence-labeled annexin V. Here we show that Leishmania promastigotes can be stained by fluorescence-labeled annexin V upon permeabilization or miltefosine treatment. However, combined lipid analysis by thin-layer chromatography, mass spectrometry and 31 P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy revealed that Leishmania promastigotes lack any detectable amount of PS. Instead, we identified several other phospholipid classes such phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylethanolamine; phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylinositol as candidate lipids enabling annexin V staining.

FAZIT (AW)

Research Training Group 1121 of the German Research Foundation

Carlsberg Foundation

Center for Synthetic Biology at Copenhagen University

UNIK research initiative of the Danish Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation

Identificador

PLOS ONE, SAN FRANCISCO, v. 7, n. 8, pp. 93-105, AUG 1, 2012

1932-6203

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/37343

10.1371/journal.pone.0042070

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042070

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

SAN FRANCISCO

Relação

PLOS ONE

Direitos

openAccess

Copyright PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Palavras-Chave #MALDI-TOF MS #MASS-SPECTROMETRY #DONOVANI PROMASTIGOTES #TRYPANOSOMA-BRUCEI #APOPTOTIC MIMICRY #KENNEDY PATHWAY #BLOOD-STREAM #CELL-DEATH #PHOSPHOLIPIDS #ASYMMETRY #MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion