Author:
FRAME M. J.,MOTTRAM J. C.,COOMBS G. H.
Abstract
Promastigotes of Leishmania mexicana mutants lacking the multicopy CPB
cysteine proteinase genes (ΔCPB) are markedly
less able than wild-type parasites to infect macrophages in vitro. ΔCPB promastigotes invade macrophages in large
numbers but are unable to survive in the majority of the cells. In contrast, ΔCPB amastigotes invade and survive within
macrophages in vitro. This extreme in vitro stage-specific difference was not mimicked in vivo; both promastigotes and
amastigotes of ΔCPB produced lesions in BALB/c mice, but in each case the lesions grew considerably more slowly than
those caused by wild-type parasites and only small lesions resulted. Inhibition of CPB in situ using cell-permeant
peptidyldiazomethylketones had no measurable effect on parasite growth or differentiation axenically in vitro. In contrast,
N-benzoyloxycarbonyl-phe-ala-diazomethylketone reduced the infectivity of wild-type parasites to macrophages by 80%.
Time-course experiments demonstrated that application of the inhibitor caused effects not seen with ΔCPB, suggesting
that CPB may not be the prime target of this inhibitor. The data show that the CPB genes of L. mexicana encode enzymes
that have important roles in intracellular survival of the parasite and more generally in its interaction with its mammalian
host.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
59 articles.
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