Abstract

Leishmaniases are widespread neglected diseases with an incidence of 1.6 million new cases and 40 thousand deaths per year. Leishmania parasites may show distinct, species-specific patterns of virulence that lead to different clinical manifestations. It is well known that successive in vitro passages (SIVP) lead to the attenuation of virulence, but neither the metabolism nor the pathways involved in these processes are well understood. Herein, promastigotes of a virulent L. amazonensis strain recently isolated from mice was compared to SIVP derived and attenuated promastigotes, submitted to 10, 40, and 60 axenic passages and named R10, R40, and R60, respectively. In vitro assays and in vivo tests were performed to characterize and confirmed the attenuation profiles. A metabolomic fingerprint comparison of R0, R10, and R60 was performed by means of capillary electrophoresis, liquid and gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. To validate the metabolomic data, qPCR for selected loci, flow cytometry to measure aPS exposure, sensitivity to antimony tartrate and ROS production assays were conducted. The 65 identified metabolites were clustered in biochemical categories and mapped in eight metabolic pathways: ABC transporters; fatty acid biosynthesis; glycine, serine and threonine metabolism; β-alanine metabolism; glutathione metabolism; oxidative phosphorylation; glycerophospholipid metabolism and lysine degradation. The obtained metabolomic data correlated with previous proteomic findings of the SVIP parasites and the gene expression of 13 selected targets. Late SIVP cultures were more sensitive to SbIII produced more ROS and exposed less phosphatidylserine in their surface. The correspondent pathways were connected to build a biochemical map of the most significant alterations involved with the process of attenuation of L. amazonensis. Overall, the reported data pointed out to a very dynamic and continuous metabolic reprogramming process, accompanied by changes in energetic, lipid and redox metabolisms, membrane remodeling and reshaping of parasite-host cells interactions, causing impacts in chemotaxis, host inflammatory responses and infectivity at the early stages of infection.

Highlights

  • Leishmaniasis is a group of neglected diseases, endemic in 98 countries, which are caused by different species of the genus Leishmania

  • In this study we have applied a multi-analytical platform approach, encompassing liquid and gas chromatography and capilary eletrophoresis all coupled to mass spectometry (LCMS, GC-MS and CE-MS, respectively) to identify as broadly as possible the highly diversified biochemical classes of metabolites associated with virulence attenuation in previously described successive in vitro passages (SIVP) parasites of L. amazonensis promastigotes (Magalhães et al, 2014)

  • Since alterations in energetic metabolism and cell redox pathways were concomitantly by proteomics and metabolomics of SIVP parasites, we investigated if reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels were significantly altered in SIVP parasites, using a very specific reagent (CellRox deep red) that becomes oxidized and fluorescent when ROS is present

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Leishmaniasis is a group of neglected diseases, endemic in 98 countries, which are caused by different species of the genus Leishmania. In this study we have applied a multi-analytical platform approach, encompassing liquid and gas chromatography and capilary eletrophoresis all coupled to mass spectometry (LCMS, GC-MS and CE-MS, respectively) to identify as broadly as possible the highly diversified biochemical classes of metabolites associated with virulence attenuation in previously described SIVP parasites of L. amazonensis promastigotes (Magalhães et al, 2014). Additional assays were performed for biological characterization and validation of parasite infectivity, metacyclogenesis, phosphatidylserine exposure and sensitivity to antimonial drugs This untargeted metabolomics approach unveiled and linked several metabolites and biochemical pathways that are, in a concerted and dynamic way, associated to the adaptation of promastigotes to long-term axenic cultivation and attenuation

Ethics Statement
Evaluation of Cellular Oxidative Stress
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
ETHICS STATEMENT
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