Doehl Johannes S P, Sádlová Jovana, Aslan Hamide, Pružinová Kateřina, Metangmo Sonia, Votýpka Jan, Kamhawi Shaden, Volf Petr, Smith Deborah F
Centre for Immunology and Infection, Department of Biology, University of York, York, United Kingdom.
Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.
PLoS Pathog. 2017 Jan 17;13(1):e1006130. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006130. eCollection 2017 Jan.
Differentiation of extracellular Leishmania promastigotes within their sand fly vector, termed metacyclogenesis, is considered to be essential for parasites to regain mammalian host infectivity. Metacyclogenesis is accompanied by changes in the local parasite environment, including secretion of complex glycoconjugates within the promastigote secretory gel and colonization and degradation of the sand fly stomodeal valve. Deletion of the stage-regulated HASP and SHERP genes on chromosome 23 of Leishmania major is known to stall metacyclogenesis in the sand fly but not in in vitro culture. Here, parasite mutants deficient in specific genes within the HASP/SHERP chromosomal region have been used to investigate their role in metacyclogenesis, parasite transmission and establishment of infection. Metacyclogenesis was stalled in HASP/SHERP mutants in vivo and, although still capable of osmotaxis, these mutants failed to secrete promastigote secretory gel, correlating with a lack of parasite accumulation in the thoracic midgut and failure to colonise the stomodeal valve. These defects prevented parasite transmission to a new mammalian host. Sand fly midgut homogenates modulated parasite behaviour in vitro, suggesting a role for molecular interactions between parasite and vector in Leishmania development within the sand fly. For the first time, stage-regulated expression of the small HASPA proteins in Leishmania (Leishmania) has been demonstrated: HASPA2 is expressed only in extracellular promastigotes and HASPA1 only in intracellular amastigotes. Despite its lack of expression in amastigotes, replacement of HASPA2 into the null locus background delays onset of pathology in BALB/c mice. This HASPA2-dependent effect is reversed by HASPA1 gene addition, suggesting that the HASPAs may have a role in host immunomodulation.
利什曼原虫前鞭毛体在其沙蝇载体中分化为感染性更强的后循环前鞭毛体的过程,称为循环后期分化,被认为是寄生虫恢复对哺乳动物宿主感染性所必需的。循环后期分化伴随着局部寄生虫环境的变化,包括前鞭毛体分泌凝胶内复杂糖结合物的分泌以及沙蝇口道瓣膜的定殖和降解。已知删除硕大利什曼原虫23号染色体上阶段调节的HASP和SHERP基因会使沙蝇体内的循环后期分化停滞,但在体外培养中不会。在这里,已使用HASP/SHERP染色体区域内特定基因缺陷的寄生虫突变体来研究它们在循环后期分化、寄生虫传播和感染建立中的作用。HASP/SHERP突变体在体内的循环后期分化停滞,尽管这些突变体仍具有趋渗性,但它们无法分泌前鞭毛体分泌凝胶,这与胸段中肠中缺乏寄生虫积累以及无法定殖口道瓣膜相关。这些缺陷阻止了寄生虫传播到新的哺乳动物宿主。沙蝇中肠匀浆在体外调节寄生虫行为,表明寄生虫与载体之间的分子相互作用在利什曼原虫在沙蝇体内发育中起作用。首次证明了利什曼原虫(利什曼属)中小HASPA蛋白的阶段调节表达:HASPA2仅在细胞外前鞭毛体中表达,而HASPA1仅在细胞内无鞭毛体中表达。尽管HASPA2在无鞭毛体中不表达,但将HASPA2替换为空基因座背景会延迟BALB/c小鼠发病。添加HASPA1基因可逆转这种依赖HASPA2的效应,表明HASPAs可能在宿主免疫调节中起作用。