Coiling Phagocytosis of Trypanosomatids and Fungal Cells

Author:

Rittig M. G.1,Schröppel K.2,Seack K.-H.3,Sander U.3,N’Diaye E.-N.4,Maridonneau-Parini I.4,Solbach W.2,Bogdan C.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy I1 and

2. Institute of Clinical Microbiology, Immunology and Hygiene,2 University of Erlangen, Erlangen, and

3. Institut für Wissenschaftlichen Film, Göttingen,3 Germany, and

4. Institute of Pharmacology and Structural Biology, CNRS, Toulouse, France4

Abstract

ABSTRACT Coiling phagocytosis has previously been studied only with the bacteria Legionella pneumophila and Borrelia burgdorferi , and the results were inconsistent. To learn more about this unconventional phagocytic mechanism, the uptake of various eukaryotic microorganisms by human monocytes, murine macrophages, and murine dendritic cells was investigated in vitro by video and electron microscopy. Unconventional phagocytosis of Leishmania spp. promastigotes, Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes, Candida albicans hyphae, and zymosan particles from Saccharomyces cerevisiae differed in (i) morphology (rotating unilateral pseudopods with the trypanosomatids, overlapping bilateral pseudopods with the fungi), (ii) frequency (high with Leishmania ; occasional with the fungi; rare with T. cruzi ), (iii) duration (rapid with zymosan; moderate with the trypanosomatids; slow with C. albicans ), (iv) localization along the promastigotes (flagellum of Leishmania major and L. aethiopica ; flagellum or posterior pole of L. donovani ), and (v) dependence on complement (strong with L. major and L. donovani ; moderate with the fungi; none with L. aethiopica ). All of these various types of unconventional phagocytosis gave rise to similar pseudopod stacks which eventually transformed to a regular phagosome. Further video microscopic studies with L. major provided evidence for a cytosolic localization, synchronized replication, and exocytic release of the parasites, extending traditional concepts about leishmanial infection of host cells. It is concluded that coiling phagocytosis comprises phenotypically similar consequences of various disturbances in conventional phagocytosis rather than representing a single separate mechanism.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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