Author:
MOSSER D. M.,BRITTINGHAM A.
Abstract
Leishmania are intracellular protozoan parasites which
reside
primarily, if not exclusively, in host mononuclear phagocytes. Several
studies
have demonstrated that infectious promastigotes rapidly and efficiently
fix complement when they
encounter serum components during their transmission to the mammalian host.
Activation of the complement system by
a microorganism can have 3 distinct biological effects. First, fixation
of the terminal complement components can result
in complement-mediated lysis. Second, fixation of the 3rd component of
complement can lead to opsonization of the
organism for uptake by phagocytic cells. Finally, the elaboration of the
complement anaphylotoxins, C3a and C5a, can
lead to inflammation. In the present chapter, we discuss the interaction
of leishmania promastigotes with the complement
system. We show that infectious promastigotes avoid the lytic effects
of complement and resist fixation of the terminal
complement components. At the same time, however, these organisms depend
on fixation of opsonic complement to invade
host mononuclear phagocytes efficiently. We discuss the mechanisms which
allow metacyclic leishmania promastigotes to
exploit the opsonic properties of complement and the receptors on
macrophages involved in leishmania recognition. The
role of complement mediated inflammatory processes in the host response
to leishmania infection is an area which requires additional study.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology