Abstract

Leishmania parasites use polymorphonuclear neutrophils as intermediate hosts before their ultimate delivery to macrophages following engulfment of parasite-infected neutrophils. This leads to a silent and unrecognized entry of Leishmania into the macrophage host cell. Neutrophil function depends on its cytoplasmic granules, but their mobilization and role in how Leishmania parasites evade intracellular killing in neutrophils remain undetermined. Here, we have found by ultrastructural approaches that neutrophils ingested Leishmania major promastigotes, and azurophilic granules fused in a preferential way with parasite-containing phagosomes, without promoting parasite killing. Azurophilic granules, identified by the granule marker myeloperoxidase, also fused with Leishmania donovani-engulfed vacuoles in human neutrophils. In addition, the azurophilic membrane marker CD63 was also detected in the vacuole surrounding the parasite, and in the fusion of azurophilic granules with the parasite-engulfed phagosome. Tertiary and specific granules, involved in vacuole acidification and superoxide anion generation, hardly fused with Leishmania-containing phagosomes. L. major interaction with neutrophils did not elicit production of reactive oxygen species or mobilization of tertiary and specific granules. By using immunogold electron microscopy approaches in the engulfment of L. major and L. donovani by human neutrophils, we did not find a significant contribution of endoplasmic reticulum to the formation of Leishmania-containing vacuoles. Live Leishmania parasites were required to be optimally internalized by neutrophils. Our data suggest that Leishmania promastigotes modulate their uptake by neutrophils, and regulate granule fusion processes in a rather selective way to favor parasite survival in human neutrophils.

Highlights

  • 34528 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY position of the promastigote form of the parasite in the skin of the vertebrate host

  • Human Neutrophils Readily Ingest L. major Parasites—Following incubation of fresh human neutrophils with parasites at different neutrophil to parasite ratios at different incubation times (1– 6 h), we found that optimum parasite engulfment by human neutrophils was reached after incubation of the 1:5 neutrophil to parasite ratio for 3 h

  • CD11b and CD66b are present in the membranes of both specific and tertiary granules [14, 18, 26], whereas CD63 is present in the membranes of azurophilic granules [27] in resting human neutrophils

Read more

Summary

Introduction

34528 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY position of the promastigote form of the parasite in the skin of the vertebrate host. Incubation of neutrophils with opsonized zymosan to promote phagocytosis led to an increase in cell surface expression of CD11b, CD66b, and CD63 antigens, indicating that the major neutrophil granules fused with plasma membrane at some degree preceding phagosome sealing (Fig. 2).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.