Piras M M, Henriquez D, Piras R
Mol Biochem Parasitol. 1985 Feb;14(2):151-63. doi: 10.1016/0166-6851(85)90034-9.
It has been shown previously that the capability to adhere to and infect fibroblastic cells by Trypanosoma cruzi is expressed only partially in trypomastigotes recently liberated from infected fibroblasts, but these parasites can increase several-fold their adhesion and infectivity by a time-dependent extracellular incubation. It is now shown that polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of 125I-labelled surface proteins of the parasites change during the activation process and that protease inhibitors of diverse specificity can block both these changes and the development of adhesion and infectivity. Treatment of fresh trypomastigotes with different proteases increases immediately adhesion and infection. The effect of trypsin has been studied in detail and it was found that this protease stimulates adhesion 4- to 6-fold, even in trypomastigotes obtained and assayed in the absence of serum. Trypomastigotes incubated for various periods and then exposed to trypsin increase their adhesion to values similar to those attained by prolonged incubation of trypomastigotes alone, but infection is stimulated in fresh trypomastigotes only. Trypomastigotes whose development of activation has been inhibited either by protease inhibitors, puromycin, and tunicamycin, and are thereafter trypsinized, show respectively, that: adhesion and infection are restored immediately to the same high values obtained when untreated controls are trypsinized, adhesion is restored, but not infection, and infection is not restored. These results suggest that the adhesion step of T. cruzi trypomastigotes to fibroblastic cells depends on a membrane protein(s) that is (are) already present in an inactive or hidden form in parasites recently liberated from infected fibroblasts. Upon extracellular maturation of these trypomastigotes this proteins(s) is activated or unmasked, probably through an endogenous proteolytic process, whose expression requires protein synthesis. The penetration step requires biosynthesis of a tunicamycin-sensitive glycoprotein(s) of the parasite and its full expression necessitates serum.
先前已经表明,克氏锥虫黏附并感染成纤维细胞的能力在刚从受感染的成纤维细胞中释放出来的锥鞭毛体中只是部分表达,但这些寄生虫通过时间依赖性的细胞外孵育可以使其黏附力和感染力增加几倍。现在发现,寄生虫的¹²⁵I标记表面蛋白的聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳图谱在激活过程中会发生变化,并且不同特异性的蛋白酶抑制剂可以阻断这些变化以及黏附力和感染力的发展。用不同的蛋白酶处理新鲜的锥鞭毛体可立即增加其黏附力和感染力。已对胰蛋白酶的作用进行了详细研究,发现这种蛋白酶可刺激黏附力增加4至6倍,即使在无血清条件下获得并检测的锥鞭毛体中也是如此。孵育不同时间后再暴露于胰蛋白酶的锥鞭毛体,其黏附力增加到与仅延长锥鞭毛体孵育时间所达到的值相似,但仅新鲜的锥鞭毛体的感染力受到刺激。其激活过程已被蛋白酶抑制剂、嘌呤霉素和衣霉素抑制,随后再用胰蛋白酶处理的锥鞭毛体分别显示:黏附力和感染力立即恢复到未处理对照用胰蛋白酶处理时获得的相同高值,黏附力恢复,但感染力未恢复,感染力未恢复。这些结果表明,克氏锥虫锥鞭毛体与成纤维细胞的黏附步骤取决于一种膜蛋白,该膜蛋白在刚从受感染的成纤维细胞中释放出来的寄生虫中以无活性或隐藏形式已经存在。随着这些锥鞭毛体在细胞外成熟,这种蛋白质可能通过内源性蛋白水解过程被激活或暴露,其表达需要蛋白质合成。穿透步骤需要寄生虫合成对衣霉素敏感的糖蛋白,其充分表达需要血清。