992 resultados para Leishmania promastigotes
Resumo:
The promastigote surface protease (PSP) of Leishmania is a neutral membrane-bound zinc enzyme. The protease has no exopeptidase activity and does not cleave a large selection of substrates with chromogenic and fluorogenic leaving groups at the P1' site. The substrate specificity of the enzyme was studied by using natural and synthetic peptides of known amino acid sequence. The identification of 11 cleavage sites indicates that the enzyme preferentially cleaves peptides at the amino side when hydrophobic residues are in the P1' site and basic amino acid residues in the P2' and P3' sites. In addition, tyrosine residues are commonly found at the P1 site. Hydrolysis is not, however, restricted to these residues. These results have allowed the synthesis of a model peptide, H2N-L-I-A-Y-L-K-K-A-T-COOH, which is cleaved by PSP between the tyrosine and leucine residues with a kcat/Km ratio of 1.8 X 10(6) M-1 s-1. Furthermore, a synthetic nonapeptide overlapping the last four amino acids of the prosequence and the first five residues of mature PSP was found to be cleaved by the protease at the expected site to release the mature enzyme. This result suggests a possible autocatalytic mechanism for the activation of the protease. Finally, the hydroxamate-derivatized dipeptide Cbz-Tyr-Leu-NHOH was shown to inhibit PSP competitively with a KI of 17 microM.
Resumo:
The occurence of acute cutaneous leishmaniasis among inhabitants of 10 farms within 10 Km of the hamlet of Corte de Pedra, Bahia, Brazil was studied prospectively from 1984-l989. A mean population of 1,056 inhabitants living in 146 houses were visited every 6 months and the number of sKin ulcers recorded. A leishmanin skin test survey was done people with suggestive skin scars or active disease in l984. The incidence of skin ulcers due to Leishmania (Viannia) brasiliensis (Vlb) reached 83/1,000 inhabitants but declined sharply in the subsequent 2 years. Retrospective data shows that leishamiasis is a sporadic endemic disease. Although the reasons for this epidemic are unclear some possible aetiological factors are discussed.
Resumo:
Leismania naiffi was isolated from 10 out of 64 armadillos (Dasypus novemcinctus) examined in Amazonas, Pará and Rondônia States in the Brazilian Amazon Region. The isolates were obtained in culture from samples of liver (3), spleen (3), lymph nodes (2), skin (1) and blood (1) from the infected animals. Heavy infections with the same parasite were detected for the first time in Psychodopygus squamiventris, a common man-biting phlebotomine, in amazonas and Pará. A new case of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. naiffi is described from the Manaus area, making a total of three known cases of human infection by this parasite.
Resumo:
Mice from the majority of inbred strains are resistant to infection by Leishmania major, an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite of macrophages in the mammalian host. In contrast, mice from BALB strains are unable to control infection and develop progressive disease. In this model of infection, genetically determined resistance and susceptibility have been clearly shown to result from the appearance of parasite-specific CD4+ T helper 1 or T helper 2 cells, respectively. This murine model of infection is considered as one of the best experimental systems for the study of the mechanisms operating in vivo at the initiation of polarised T helper 1 and T helper 2 cell maturation. Among the several factors influencing Th cell development, cytokines themselves critically regulate this process. The results accumulated during the last years have clarified some aspects of the role played by cytokines in Th cell differentiation. They are providing critical information that may ultimately lead to the rational devise of means by which to tailor immune responses to the effector functions that are most efficient in preventing and/or controlling infections with pathogens.