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Leishmania

Leishmania /lʃˈmniə, -ˈmæn-/[1] is a parasitic protozoan, a single-celled organism of the genus Leishmania that is responsible for the disease leishmaniasis.[2][3][4] They are spread by sandflies of the genus Phlebotomus in the Old World, and of the genus Lutzomyia in the New World. At least 93 sandfly species are proven or probable vectors worldwide.[5] Their primary hosts are vertebrates; Leishmania commonly infects hyraxes, canids, rodents, and humans.

Leishmania
L. donovani in bone marrow cell
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Phylum: Euglenozoa
Class: Kinetoplastea
Order: Trypanosomatida
Genus: Leishmania
Ross, 1903
Species

L. aethiopica
L. amazonensis
L. arabica
L. archibaldi (starus species)
L. aristedesi (status disputed)
L. (Viannia) braziliensis
L. chagasi (syn. L. infantum)
L. donovani
L. (Mundinia) enriettii
L. forattinii (status disputed)
L. garnhami (status disputed)
L. gerbili
L. (Viannia) guyanensis
L. infantum
L. killicki (status disputed)
L. (Viannia) lainsoni
L. major
L. (Mundinia) macropodum
L. (Mundinia) martiniquensis
L. mexicana
L. (Viannia) naiffi
L. (Viannia) panamensis
L. (Viannia) peruviana
L. pifanoi (status disputed)
L. (Viannia) shawi
L. tarentolae
L. tropica
L. turanica
L. waltoni
L. venezuelensis

History edit

Members of an ancient genus of the Leishmania parasite, Paleoleishmania, have been detected in fossilized sand flies dating back to the early Cretaceous period.[6] The first written reference to the conspicuous symptoms of cutaneous leishmaniasis surfaced in the Paleotropics within oriental texts dating back to the 7th century BC (allegedly transcribed from sources several hundred years older, between 1500 and 2000 BC[7]). Due to its broad and persistent prevalence throughout antiquity as a mysterious disease of diverse symptomatic outcomes, leishmaniasis has been dubbed with various names ranging from "white leprosy" to "black fever". Some of these names suggest links to negative cultural beliefs or mythology, which still feed into the social stigmatization of leishmaniasis today.[8]

In India, both cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis are caused by Leishmania donovani.[9][10] The first records of cutaneous leishmaniasis in India were from British medical officers in the early 19th century. The disease was by then known as "oriental sore" or "Delhi boil";[11] while the visceral form was variously called "Burdwan [after the city Burdwan] fever", "kala azar" (black fever), or "Dumdum [a city in West Bengal] fever".[12]

The causative parasite for the disease was identified in 1901 as a concurrent finding by William Boog Leishman and Charles Donovan. They independently visualised microscopic single-celled parasites (later called Leishman-Donovan bodies) living within the cells of infected human organs. The parasitic genus would later be classed as trypanosomatid protozoans under the phylogenetic designation, Leishmania donovani. Several species have since been classified and grouped under two major subgenera i.e. Leishmania Viannia (generally located in the Neotropics) or Leishmania Leishmania (generally located in the Paleotropics, with the major exception of the L. mexicana subgroup).[13]

Epidemiology edit

Leishmania currently affects 6 million people in 98 countries. About 0.9–1.6 million new cases occur each year, and 21 species are known to cause disease in humans: it is considered a zoonosis.

Structure edit

Leishmania species are unicellular eukaryotes having a well-defined nucleus and other cell organelles including kinetoplasts and flagella. Depending on the stage of their life cycle, they exist in two structural variants, as:[14][15]

  1. The amastigote form is found in the mononuclear phagocytes and circulatory systems of humans. It is an intracellular and nonmotile form, being devoid of external flagella. The short flagellum is embedded at the anterior end without projecting out. It is oval in shape, and measures 3–6 µm in length and 1–3 µm in breadth. The kinetoplast and basal body lie towards the anterior end.
  2. The promastigote form is found in the alimentary tract of sandflies. It is an extracellular and motile form. It is considerably larger and highly elongated, measuring 15-30 µm in length and 5 µm in width. It is spindle-shaped, tapering at both ends. A long flagellum (about the body length) is projected externally at the anterior end. The nucleus lies at the centre, and in front of it are the kinetoplast and the basal body.
 
L. infantum amastigote forms

Evolution edit

The details of the evolution of this genus are debated, but Leishmania apparently evolved from an ancestral trypanosome lineage. The oldest lineage is that of the Bodonidae, followed by Trypanosoma brucei, the latter being confined to the African continent. Trypanosoma cruzi groups with trypanosomes from bats, South American mammals, and kangaroos suggest an origin in the Southern Hemisphere. These clades are only distantly related.

The remaining clades in this tree are Blastocrithidia, Herpetomonas, and Phytomonas. The four genera Leptomonas, Crithidia, Leishmania, and Endotrypanum form the terminal branches, suggesting a relatively recent origin. Several of these genera may be polyphyletic and may need further division.[16]

The origins of genus Leishmania itself are unclear.[17][18] One theory proposes an African origin, with migration to the Americas. Another proposes migration from the Americas to the Old World via the Bering Strait land bridge around 15 million years ago. A third theory proposes a Palearctic origin.[19] Such migrations would entail subsequent migration of vector and reservoir or successive adaptations along the way. A more recent migration is that of L. infantum from Mediterranean countries to Latin America (known as L. chagasi), since European colonization of the New World, where the parasites picked up their current New World vectors in their respective ecosystems.[20] This is the cause of the epidemics now evident. One recent New World epidemic concerns foxhounds in the USA.[21]

Although it was suggested that Leishmania might have evolved in the Neotropics,[22] this is probably true for species belonging to the subgenera Viannia and Endotrypanum. However, there is evidence that the primary evolution of the subgenera Leishmania and Sauroleishmania is the Old World. While the Mundinia species appear to be more universal in their evolution. One theory is that different lineages became isolated geographically during different periods and it is this that gave rise to this evolutionary mosaicism. But there is no doubt that the Leishmaniinae are a monophyletic group.

A large data set analysis suggests that Leishmania evolved 90 to 100 million years ago in Gondwana.[23] The reptile infecting species originated in mammalian clades.

Sauroleishmania species were originally defined on the basis that they infected reptiles (lizards) rather than mammals. Based on molecular evidences, they have been moved to subgenus status within Leishmania. This subgenus probably evolved from a group that originally infected mammals.[24]

Taxonomy edit

53 species are recognised in this genus. The status of several of these is disputed, so the final number may differ. At least 20 species infect humans. To make things more complex, hybrids might be involved, as it has been reported in Brazil with a hybrid between Leishmania (V.) guyanensis and Leishmania (V.) shawi shawi.[25]

The genus is presently divided into 4 subgenera: Leishmania, Sauroleishmania, Mundinia and Viannia. The division into the two subgenera (Leishmania and Viannia) was made by Lainson and Shaw in 1987 on the basis of their location within the insect gut. The species in the Viannia subgenus develop in the hind gut: L. (V.) braziliensis has been proposed as the type species for this subgenus. This division has been confirmed by all subsequent studies. Shaw, Camargo and Teixeira created the subgenus Mundinia while revising Leishmaniinae in 2016.[26]

Endotrypanum is closely related to Leishmania. Some Endotypanum species are unique in that they infect the erythrocytes of their hosts (sloths). All species are confined to Central and South America.[27] E. colombiensis infections have been found in man.

Sauroleishmania was originally described by Ranquein 1973 as a separate genus, but molecular studies suggest this is actually a subgenus rather than a separate genus.

The proposed division of the Leishmania into Euleishmania and Paraleishmania groups in 2000 emphasized the deep phylogenic distance between parasites, some of which had been named as Leishmania species.[28] The Euleishmania included species currently placed in the subgenera Leishmania, Sauroleishmania, Mundinia and Viannia. The proposed Paraleishmania included species of Endotypanum, Leishmamnia-L. colomubensis, L. herreri, L. hertigiand L. deanei and L. equatorensis. In a recent revision these species were given different generic status.

Four subgenera of Leishmania are now recognised - Leishmania, Sauroleishmania, Viannia and Mundinia (the L. enriettii complex). The genus Endotrypanum and Porcisia belong to the Paraleishmania.

There are four Mundinia species - L. (Mundinia) enriettii, L. (Mundinia) martiniquensis, L. (Mundinia) macropodum, and L. (Mundinia) orientalis, which is found in Thailand.[29]

L. archibaldi's specific status is unsettled but it is closely related to L. donovani.

L. herreri belongs to the genus Endotypanum rather than to Leishmania.

L. donovani and L. infantum are closely related.

Notes edit

The selenoenzyme Seltryp appears to be unique to this order.[30] It has been removed from the subgenus Viannia.

L. deanei and L. hertigi, both of which infect porcupines have been moved to the genus Porcisia.

Classification edit

Subgenus Leishmania Ross, 1903 sensu Saf'janova, 1982

  • Leishmania aethiopica Bray, Ashford & Bray, 1973
  • Leishmania amazonensis Lainson & Shaw, 1972 (includes garnhami Scorza et al., 1979)
  • Leishmania arabica Peters, Elbihari & Evans, 1986
  • Leishmania aristidesi Lainson & Shaw, 1979
  • Leishmania donovani (Laveran & Mesnil, 1903)
  • Leishmania forattinii Yoshida, Cuba, Pacheco, Cupolillo, Tavares, Machado, Homen & Grimaldi, 1993
  • Leishmania gerbilli Wang, Qu & Guan, 1964
  • Leishmania infantum Nicolle, 1908 (subspecies chagasi Cunha & Chagas, 1937)
  • Leishmania killicki Rioux, Lamotte & Pratlong, 1986
  • Leishmania major Yakimoff & Schokhor, 1914
  • Leishmania mexicana Biagi, 1953
  • Leishmania pifanoi Medina & Romero, 1959
  • Leishmania tropica (Wright, 1903)
  • Leishmania turanica Strelkova, Shurkhal, Kellina, Eliseev, Evans, Peters, Chapman, Le Blancq & van Eys, 1990
  • Leishmania venezeulensis Bonfante-Garrido, 1980
  • Leishmania waltoni Shaw, Pratlong & Dedet 2015

Subgenus Mundinia Shaw,Camargo and Teixeira 2016

  • Leishmania enriettii Muniz & Medina, 1948
  • Leishmania macropodum Barratt, Kaufer, Peters, Craig, Lawrence, Roberts, Lee, McAuliffe, Stark, Ellis, 2017
  • Leishmania martiniquensis Desbois, Pratlong, Quist and Dedet,2014[31]
  • Leishmania orientalis Jariyapan, Daroontum, Jaiwong, Chanmol,.Intakhan, Sor-Suwan, Siriyasatien, Somboon, Bates, Bates, 2018

Subgenus Sauroleishmania Ranque, 1973 sensu Saf'janova, 1982

  • Leishmania adleri Heisch, 1958
  • Leishmania agamae David, 1929
  • Leishmania ceramodactyli Adler & Theodor, 1929
  • Leishmania gulikae Ovezmukhammedov & Saf'janova, 1987
  • Leishmania gymnodactyliKhodukin & Sofiev, 1940
  • Leishmania helioscopiChodukin & Sofiev, 1940
  • Leishmania hemidactyli Mackie, Gupta & Swaminath, 1923
  • Leishmania hoogstraali McMillan, 1965
  • Leishmania nicollei Chodukin & Sofieff, 1940
  • Leishmania platycephala Telford, 2009
  • Leishmania phrynocephali Chodukin & Sofieff, 1940
  • Leishmania senegalensis Ranque, 1973
  • Leishmania sofieffiMarkov, Lukina & Markova, 1964
  • Leishmania tarentolae Wenyon, 1921
  • Leishmania zmeeviAndruchko & Markov 1955
  • Leishmania zuckermani Paperna, Boulard, Hering-Hagenbeck & Landau, 2001

↑ Species described as Sauroleishmania. Their development is not like other members of the subgenus and so their taxonomic position is doubtful.

Subgenus Viannia Lainson & Shaw 1987

  • Leishmania braziliensis Vianna, 1911
  • Leishmania guyanensis Floch, 1954
  • Leishmania lainsoni Silveira, Shaw, Braga & Ishikawa, 1987
  • Leishmania lindenbergi Silveira, Ishikawa, De Souza & Lainson, 2002
  • Leishmania naiffi Lainson & Shaw, 1989
  • Leishmania panamensis Lainson & Shaw, 1972
  • Leishmania peruviana Velez, 1913
  • Leishmania shawi Lainson, Braga & de Souza, 1989
  • Leishmania utingensis Braga, Lainson, Ishikawa & Shaw 2003

Related genera edit

The relationships between Leishmania and other genera such as Endotrypanum, Novymonas, Porcisia, and Zelonia is presently unclear as they are closely related.[32][13] Endotrypanum colombiensis, ofter known as Leishmania colombiensis, has been associated with both cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis in Venezuela.[33]

Genus Endotrypanum

  • Endotrypanum colombiensis Kreutzer, Corredor, Grimaldi, Grogl, Rowton, Young, Morales, McMahon-Pratt, Guzman & Tesh, 1991
  • Endotrypanum equatorensis Grimaldi, Kreutzer, Hashiguchi, Gomet, Mimory & Tesh, 1992
  • Endotrypanum herreri Zeledon, Ponce & Murillo, 1979
  • Endotrypanum monterogeii Shaw, 1969
  • Endotrypanum schaudinni Mesnil and Brimont, 1908

Genus Novymonas Kostygov and Yurchenko 2016

  • Novymonas esmeraldas Votýpka, Kostygov, Maslov and Lukeš, 2016

Genus Porcisia Shaw, Camargo and Teixeira, 2016

  • Porcisia deanei Lainson & Shaw, 1977
  • Porcisia hertigi Herrer, 1971

Genus Zelonia Shaw, Camargo and Teixeira, 2016

  • Zelonia australiensis Barratt, Kaufer, Peters, Craig, Lawrence, Roberts, Lee, McAuliffe, Stark, Ellis, 2017
  • Zelonia costaricensis Yurchenko, Lukes, Jirku, Zeledon, Maslov, 2006

Biochemistry and cell biology edit

The biochemistry and cell biology of Leishmania is similar to that of other kinetoplastids. They share the same main morphological features: a single flagellum which has an invagination - the flagellar pocket - at its base; a kinetoplast, which is found in the single mitochondrion; and a subpelicular array of microtubules, which make up the main part of the cytoskeleton.

Lipophosphoglycan coat edit

Leishmania possesses a lipophosphoglycan coat over the outside of the cell. Lipophosphoglycan is a trigger for toll-like receptor 2, a signalling receptor involved in triggering an innate immune response in mammals.

The precise structure of lipophosphoglycan varies depending on the species and lifecycle stage of the parasite. The glycan component is particularly variable and different lipophosphoglycan variants can be used as a molecular marker for different lifecycle stages. Lectins, a group of proteins which bind different glycans, are often used to detect these lipophosphoglycan variants. For example, peanut agglutinin binds a particular lipophosphoglycan found on the surface of the infective form of L. major.

Lipophosphoglycan is used by the parasite to promote its survival in the host and the mechanisms by which the parasite does this center around modulating the immune response of the host. This is vital, as the Leishmania parasites live within macrophages and need to prevent the macrophages from killing them. Lipophosphoglycan has a role in resisting the complement system, inhibiting the oxidative burst response, inducing an inflammation response and preventing natural killer T cells recognising that the macrophage is infected with the Leishmania parasite.

Type Pathogen Location
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (localised and diffuse) infections appear as obvious skin reactions. The most common is the Oriental Sore (caused by Old World species L. major, L. tropica, and L. aethiopica). In the New World, the most common culprits is L. mexicana. Cutaneous infections are most common in Afghanistan, Brazil, Iran, Peru, Saudi Arabia and Syria.
Mucocutaneous leishmaniasis infections start off as a reaction at the bite, and can go by metastasis into the mucous membrane and become fatal. L. braziliensis Mucocutaneous infections are most common in Bolivia, Brazil and Peru. Mucocutaneous infections are also found in Karamay, China Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
Visceral leishmaniasis infections are often recognised by fever, swelling of the liver and spleen, and anemia. They are known by many local names, of which the most common is probably kala azar,[34][35] Caused exclusively by species of the L. donovani complex (L. donovani, L. infantum syn. L. chagasi).[2] Found in tropical and subtropical areas of all continents except Australia, visceral infections are most common in Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Nepal, and Sudan.[2] Visceral leishmaniasis also found in part of China, such as Sichuan Province, Gansu Province, and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

Intracellular mechanism of infection edit

In order to avoid destruction by the immune system and thrive, the Leishmania 'hides' inside its host's cells. This location enables it to avoid the action of the humoral immune response (because the pathogen is safely inside a cell and outside the open bloodstream), and furthermore it may prevent the immune system from destroying its host through nondanger surface signals which discourage apoptosis. The primary cell types Leishmania infiltrates are phagocytotic cells such as neutrophils and macrophages.[36]

Usually, a phagocytotic immune cell like a macrophage will ingest a pathogen within an enclosed endosome and then fill this endosome with enzymes which digest the pathogen. However, in the case of Leishmania, these enzymes have no effect, allowing the parasite to multiply rapidly. This uninhibited growth of parasites eventually overwhelms the host macrophage or other immune cell, causing it to die.[37]

Transmitted by the sandfly, the protozoan parasites of L. major may switch the strategy of the first immune defense from eating/inflammation/killing to eating/no inflammation/no killing of their host phagocyte and corrupt it for their own benefit.[citation needed] They use the willingly phagocytosing polymorphonuclear neutrophil granulocytes (PMNs) rigorously as a tricky hideout, where they proliferate unrecognized from the immune system and enter the long-lived macrophages to establish a "hidden" infection.[citation needed]

Uptake and survival edit

 
Lifecycle of Leishmania

Upon microbial infection, PMNs move out from the bloodstream through the vessels' endothelial layer, to the site of the infected tissue (dermal tissue after fly bite). They immediately initiate the first immune response and phagocytize the invader by recognition of foreign and activating surfaces on the parasite. Activated PMN secrete chemokines, IL-8 particularly, to attract further granulocytes and stimulate phagocytosis. Further, L. major increases the secretion of IL-8 by PMNs. This mechanism is observed during infection with other obligate intracellular parasites, as well. For microbes like these, multiple intracellular survival mechanisms exist. Surprisingly, the coinjection of apoptotic and viable pathogens causes by far a more fulminate course of disease than injection of only viable parasites. When the anti-inflammatory signal phosphatidylserine usually found on apoptotic cells, is exposed on the surface of dead parasites, L. major switches off the oxidative burst, thereby preventing killing and degradation of the viable pathogen.

In the case of Leishmania, progeny are not generated in PMNs, but in this way they can survive and persist untangled in the primary site of infection. The promastigote forms also release Leishmania chemotactic factor (LCF) to actively recruit neutrophils, but not other leukocytes, for instance monocytes or NK cells. In addition to that, the production of interferon gamma (IFNγ)-inducible protein 10 (IP10) by PMNs is blocked in attendance of Leishmania, what involves the shut down of inflammatory and protective immune response by NK and Th1 cell recruitment. The pathogens stay viable during phagocytosis since their primary hosts, the PMNs, expose apoptotic cell-associated molecular pattern (ACAMP) signaling "no pathogen".

Persistency and attraction edit

The lifespan of neutrophil granulocytes is quite short. They circulate in bloodstream for about 6 to 10 hours after leaving bone marrow, whereupon they undergo spontaneous apoptosis. Microbial pathogens have been reported to influence cellular apoptosis by different strategies. Obviously because of the inhibition of caspase3-activation, L. major can induce the delay of neutrophils apoptosis and extend their lifespan for at least 2–3 days. The fact of extended lifespan is very beneficial for the development of infection because the final host cells for these parasites are macrophages, which normally migrate to the sites of infection within two or three days. The pathogens are not dronish; instead they take over the command at the primary site of infection. They induce the production by PMNs of the chemokines MIP-1α and MIP-1β (macrophage inflammatory protein) to recruit macrophages.[38]

An important factor in prolonging infection is the inhibition of the adaptive immune system. This occurs especially during the intercellular phases, when amastigotes search for new macrophages to infect and are more susceptible to immune responses. Nearly all types of phagocytes are targeted.[39] For example, mincle has been shown to be targeted by L. major. Interaction between mincle and a protein released by the parasite results in a weakened immune response in dendritic cells.[40]

Silent phagocytosis theory edit

To save the integrity of the surrounding tissue from the toxic cell components and proteolytic enzymes contained in neutrophils, the apoptotic PMNs are silently cleared by macrophages. Dying PMNs expose the "eat me"-signal phosphatidylserine which is transferred to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane during apoptosis. By reason of delayed apoptosis, the parasites that persist in PMNs are taken up into macrophages, employing an absolutely physiological and nonphlogistic process. The strategy of this "silent phagocytosis" has the following advantages for the parasite:

  • Taking up apoptotic cells silences macrophage killing activity leading to a survival of the pathogens.
  • Pathogens inside of PMNs have no direct contact to the macrophage surface receptors, because they can not see the parasite inside the apoptotic cell. So, the activation of the phagocyte for immune activation does not occur.

However, studies have shown this is unlikely, as the pathogens are seen to leave apoptopic cells and no evidence is known of macrophage uptake by this method.

Molecular biology edit

An important aspect of the Leishmania protozoan is its glycoconjugate layer of lipophosphoglycan (LPG). This is held together with a phosphoinositide membrane anchor, and has a tripartite structure consisting of a lipid domain, a neutral hexasaccharide, and a phosphorylated galactose-mannose, with a termination in a neutral cap. Not only do these parasites develop postphlebotomus digestion, but it is also thought to be essential to oxidative bursts, thus allowing passage for infection. Characteristics of intracellular digestion include an endosome fusing with a lysosome, releasing acid hydrolases which degrade DNA, RNA, proteins and carbohydrates.

Genomics edit

 
Leishmania tropica

The genomes of four Leishmania species (L. major, L. infantum, L. donovani and L. braziliensis) have been sequenced, revealing more than 8300 protein-coding and 900 RNA genes. Almost 40% of protein-coding genes fall into 662 families containing between two and 500 members. Most of the smaller gene families are tandem arrays of one to three genes, while the larger gene families are often dispersed in tandem arrays at different loci throughout the genome. Each of the 35 or 36 chromosomes is organized into a small number of gene clusters of tens-to-hundreds of genes on the same DNA strand. These clusters can be organized in head-to-head (divergent) or tail-to-tail (convergent) fashion, with the latter often separated by tRNA, rRNA and/or snRNA genes. Transcription of protein-coding genes initiates bidirectionally in the divergent strand-switch regions between gene clusters and extends polycistronically through each gene cluster before terminating in the strand-switch region separating convergent clusters. Leishmania telomeres are usually relatively small, consisting of a few different types of repeat sequence. Evidence can be found for recombination between several different groups of telomeres. The L. major and L. infantum genomes contain only about 50 copies of inactive degenerated Ingi/L1Tc-related elements (DIREs), while L. braziliensis also contains several telomere-associated transposable elements and spliced leader-associated retroelements. The Leishmania genomes share a conserved core proteome of about 6200 genes with the related trypanosomatids Trypanosoma brucei and Trypanosoma cruzi, but around 1000 Leishmania-specific genes are known, which are mostly randomly distributed throughout the genome. Relatively few (about 200) species-specific differences in gene content exist between the three sequenced Leishmania genomes, but about 8% of the genes appear to be evolving at different rates between the three species, indicative of different selective pressures that could be related to disease pathology. About 65% of protein-coding genes currently lack functional assignment.[3]

Leishmania species produce several different heat shock proteins. These include Hsp83, a homolog of Hsp90. A regulatory element in the 3' UTR of Hsp83 controls translation of Hsp83 in a temperature-sensitive manner. This region forms a stable RNA structure which melts at higher temperatures.[41]

Genomic instability edit

Leishmania lacks of promoter-dependent regulation, so its genomic regulation is at post-transcriptional level through copy number variations (CNV) of transcripts, a mechanism capable of controlling the abundance of these transcripts according to the situation in which the organism finds itself. These processes cause a great susceptibility to genomic instability in the parasite. This involves epistatic interactions between genes, which drive these changes in gene expression, leading to compensatory mechanisms in the Leishmania genome that result in the adaptive evolution of the parasite. During the research carried out by Giovanni Bussotti and collaborators at the Pasteur Institute, belonging to the University of Paris, a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of Leishmania donovani identified CNVs in 14% of the coding regions and in 4% of the non-coding regions. In addition, an experimental evolution study (EE Approach) was performed on L. donovani amastigotes obtained from clinical cases of hamsters. By extracting these amastigotes from infected organisms and culturing them in vitro for 36 weeks (3800 generations), it was demonstrated how genomic instability in this parasite is capable of adapting to complicated situations, such as in vitro culture. An 11kb deletion was detected in the gene coding for Ld1S_360735700, a NIMA-related kinase with key functions in the correct progression of mitosis. With the advancement of in vitro culture generations the loss of the kinase becomes more notorious, decreasing growth rate of the parasite, but the genomic instability of Leishmania manages, through compensatory mechanisms, to attenuate this reduction in growth so that the in vitro culture is maintained. First, as an adaptation of the culture to the loss of this kinase, it was detected an increase in the expression of another orthologous kinase (Ld1S_360735800) whose coding region is adjacent to that of the lost kinase. Secondly, a reduction in the expression of 23 transcripts related to flagellar biogenesis was observed. So adaptation in Leishmania leads the parasite to eliminate flagellar movement from its needs, since it is not necessary in in vitro culture, preserving the energy invested in this movement to increase the growth rate and compensating the loss of the kinase. Finally, coamplification of ribosomal protein clusters, ribosomal RNA (rRNA), transfer RNA (tRNA) and nucleolar small RNA (snoRNA) was observed. Increased expression of these clusters leads to increased ribosomal biogenesis and protein biosynthesis. This is most evident in the case of small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNA), for which amplification of a large cluster of 15 snoRNAs was observed on chromosome 33. The function of these nucleic acids is methylation and inclusion of pseuouridine in ribosomes. In this case, an increase in these modifications was observed in the large subunits of the ribosomes of individuals in culture, specifically in the PTC (peptidyl transferase center) and in the mRNA entry tunnel to the ribosome for protein synthesis. These changes lead to an increase in ribosomal biogenesis, resulting in increased protein synthesis and growth rate. In conclusion, the loss of the kinase is compensated by the genomic instability of Leishmania donovani by increasing the expression of another orthologous kinase, decreasing flagellar biogenesis and increasing ribosomal biogenesis. These compensations result in the growth rate of the culture being as less affected as possible by the initial loss of the kinase, and the parasite is perfectly adapted to the in vitro culture, which is not its natural habitat. [42]

Sexual reproduction edit

A microbial pathogen's reproductive system is one of the basic biologic processes that condition the microorganism's ecology and disease spread.[43] In 2009 Akopyants et al.[44] demonstrated that L. major has a sexual cycle, including a meiotic process. Hybrid progeny are formed that have full genomic complements from both parents. Mating only occurs in the sand fly vector, and hybrids can be transmitted to the mammalian host by sand fly bite. In L. braziliensis matings in nature are predominantly between related individuals resulting in extreme inbreeding.[45] The rate of outcrossing between different strains of Leishmania in the sand fly vector depends on the frequency of co-infection. Such outcrossing events appear to be rare in L. major [44] and L. donovani.[46]

L. infantum produces proteins BRCA1 and RAD51 that interact with each other to promote homologous recombinational repair.[47] These proteins play a key role in meiosis. Thus, meiotic events provide the adaptive advantage of efficient recombinational repair of DNA damages even when they do not lead to outcrossing[48]

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ a b Myler P; Fasel N (editors) (2008). Leishmania: After The Genome. Caister Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-904455-28-8. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Ansari MY, Equbal A, Dikhit MR, Mansuri R, Rana S, Ali V, Sahoo GC, Das P (Nov 2015). "Establishment of Correlation between In-Silico &In-Vitro Test Analysis against Leishmania HGPRT to inhibitors". International Journal of Biological Macromolecules. 83: 78–96. doi:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2015.11.051. PMID 26616453.
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Further reading edit

  • Van Zandbergen, G; Bollinger, A; Wenzel, A; Kamhawi, S; Voll, R; Klinger, M; Muller, A; Holscher, C; Herrmann, M; Sacks, D; Solbach, W; Laskay, T (2006). "Leishmania disease development depends on the presence of apoptotic promastigotes in the virulent inoculum". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103 (37): 13837–42. Bibcode:2006PNAS..10313837V. doi:10.1073/pnas.0600843103. PMC 1564231. PMID 16945916.
  • Shaw, Jeffrey Jon (1969). The Haemoflagellates of Sloths. H. K. Lewis & Co. Ltd.: London.
  • Ansari MY, Dikhit MR, Sahoo GC, Das P (2012). "Comparative modeling of HGPRT enzyme of L. donovani and binding affinities of different analogs of GMP". Int J Biol Macromol. 50 (3): 637–49. doi:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2012.01.010. PMID 22327112.

External links edit

  • A discussion list (Leish-L) is also available with over 600 subscribers to the list, ranging from molecular biologists to public health workers, from many countries both inside and outside endemic regions. Comments and questions are welcomed.
  • KBD: Kinetoplastid Biology and Disease, is a website devoted to leishmaniasis, sleeping sickness and Chagas disease (American trypanosomiasis). It contains free access to full text peer-reviewed articles on these subjects. The site contains many articles relating to the unique kinetoplastid organelle and genetic material therein.
  • Drug Search for Leishmaniasis World Community Grid

leishmania, this, article, about, parasite, infection, parasitic, protozoan, single, celled, organism, genus, that, responsible, disease, leishmaniasis, they, spread, sandflies, genus, phlebotomus, world, genus, lutzomyia, world, least, sandfly, species, prove. This article is about the parasite For the infection see Leishmaniasis Leishmania l iː ʃ ˈ m eɪ n i e ˈ m ae n 1 is a parasitic protozoan a single celled organism of the genus Leishmania that is responsible for the disease leishmaniasis 2 3 4 They are spread by sandflies of the genus Phlebotomus in the Old World and of the genus Lutzomyia in the New World At least 93 sandfly species are proven or probable vectors worldwide 5 Their primary hosts are vertebrates Leishmania commonly infects hyraxes canids rodents and humans LeishmaniaL donovani in bone marrow cellScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaPhylum EuglenozoaClass KinetoplasteaOrder TrypanosomatidaGenus LeishmaniaRoss 1903SpeciesL aethiopicaL amazonensisL arabicaL archibaldi starus species L aristedesi status disputed L Viannia braziliensisL chagasi syn L infantum L donovaniL Mundinia enriettiiL forattinii status disputed L garnhami status disputed L gerbiliL Viannia guyanensisL infantumL killicki status disputed L Viannia lainsoniL majorL Mundinia macropodumL Mundinia martiniquensisL mexicanaL Viannia naiffiL Viannia panamensisL Viannia peruvianaL pifanoi status disputed L Viannia shawiL tarentolaeL tropicaL turanicaL waltoniL venezuelensis Contents 1 History 2 Epidemiology 3 Structure 4 Evolution 5 Taxonomy 5 1 Notes 6 Classification 6 1 Related genera 7 Biochemistry and cell biology 7 1 Lipophosphoglycan coat 7 2 Intracellular mechanism of infection 7 3 Uptake and survival 7 4 Persistency and attraction 7 5 Silent phagocytosis theory 8 Molecular biology 9 Genomics 10 Genomic instability 11 Sexual reproduction 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory editMembers of an ancient genus of the Leishmania parasite Paleoleishmania have been detected in fossilized sand flies dating back to the early Cretaceous period 6 The first written reference to the conspicuous symptoms of cutaneous leishmaniasis surfaced in the Paleotropics within oriental texts dating back to the 7th century BC allegedly transcribed from sources several hundred years older between 1500 and 2000 BC 7 Due to its broad and persistent prevalence throughout antiquity as a mysterious disease of diverse symptomatic outcomes leishmaniasis has been dubbed with various names ranging from white leprosy to black fever Some of these names suggest links to negative cultural beliefs or mythology which still feed into the social stigmatization of leishmaniasis today 8 In India both cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis are caused by Leishmania donovani 9 10 The first records of cutaneous leishmaniasis in India were from British medical officers in the early 19th century The disease was by then known as oriental sore or Delhi boil 11 while the visceral form was variously called Burdwan after the city Burdwan fever kala azar black fever or Dumdum a city in West Bengal fever 12 The causative parasite for the disease was identified in 1901 as a concurrent finding by William Boog Leishman and Charles Donovan They independently visualised microscopic single celled parasites later called Leishman Donovan bodies living within the cells of infected human organs The parasitic genus would later be classed as trypanosomatid protozoans under the phylogenetic designation Leishmania donovani Several species have since been classified and grouped under two major subgenera i e Leishmania Viannia generally located in the Neotropics or Leishmania Leishmania generally located in the Paleotropics with the major exception of the L mexicana subgroup 13 Epidemiology editLeishmania currently affects 6 million people in 98 countries About 0 9 1 6 million new cases occur each year and 21 species are known to cause disease in humans it is considered a zoonosis Structure editLeishmania species are unicellular eukaryotes having a well defined nucleus and other cell organelles including kinetoplasts and flagella Depending on the stage of their life cycle they exist in two structural variants as 14 15 The amastigote form is found in the mononuclear phagocytes and circulatory systems of humans It is an intracellular and nonmotile form being devoid of external flagella The short flagellum is embedded at the anterior end without projecting out It is oval in shape and measures 3 6 µm in length and 1 3 µm in breadth The kinetoplast and basal body lie towards the anterior end The promastigote form is found in the alimentary tract of sandflies It is an extracellular and motile form It is considerably larger and highly elongated measuring 15 30 µm in length and 5 µm in width It is spindle shaped tapering at both ends A long flagellum about the body length is projected externally at the anterior end The nucleus lies at the centre and in front of it are the kinetoplast and the basal body nbsp L infantum amastigote formsEvolution editThe details of the evolution of this genus are debated but Leishmania apparently evolved from an ancestral trypanosome lineage The oldest lineage is that of the Bodonidae followed by Trypanosoma brucei the latter being confined to the African continent Trypanosoma cruzi groups with trypanosomes from bats South American mammals and kangaroos suggest an origin in the Southern Hemisphere These clades are only distantly related The remaining clades in this tree are Blastocrithidia Herpetomonas and Phytomonas The four genera Leptomonas Crithidia Leishmania and Endotrypanum form the terminal branches suggesting a relatively recent origin Several of these genera may be polyphyletic and may need further division 16 The origins of genus Leishmania itself are unclear 17 18 One theory proposes an African origin with migration to the Americas Another proposes migration from the Americas to the Old World via the Bering Strait land bridge around 15 million years ago A third theory proposes a Palearctic origin 19 Such migrations would entail subsequent migration of vector and reservoir or successive adaptations along the way A more recent migration is that of L infantum from Mediterranean countries to Latin America known as L chagasi since European colonization of the New World where the parasites picked up their current New World vectors in their respective ecosystems 20 This is the cause of the epidemics now evident One recent New World epidemic concerns foxhounds in the USA 21 Although it was suggested that Leishmania might have evolved in the Neotropics 22 this is probably true for species belonging to the subgenera Viannia and Endotrypanum However there is evidence that the primary evolution of the subgenera Leishmania and Sauroleishmania is the Old World While the Mundinia species appear to be more universal in their evolution One theory is that different lineages became isolated geographically during different periods and it is this that gave rise to this evolutionary mosaicism But there is no doubt that the Leishmaniinae are a monophyletic group A large data set analysis suggests that Leishmania evolved 90 to 100 million years ago in Gondwana 23 The reptile infecting species originated in mammalian clades Sauroleishmania species were originally defined on the basis that they infected reptiles lizards rather than mammals Based on molecular evidences they have been moved to subgenus status within Leishmania This subgenus probably evolved from a group that originally infected mammals 24 Taxonomy edit53 species are recognised in this genus The status of several of these is disputed so the final number may differ At least 20 species infect humans To make things more complex hybrids might be involved as it has been reported in Brazil with a hybrid between Leishmania V guyanensis and Leishmania V shawi shawi 25 The genus is presently divided into 4 subgenera Leishmania Sauroleishmania Mundinia and Viannia The division into the two subgenera Leishmania and Viannia was made by Lainson and Shaw in 1987 on the basis of their location within the insect gut The species in the Viannia subgenus develop in the hind gut L V braziliensis has been proposed as the type species for this subgenus This division has been confirmed by all subsequent studies Shaw Camargo and Teixeira created the subgenus Mundinia while revising Leishmaniinae in 2016 26 Endotrypanum is closely related to Leishmania Some Endotypanum species are unique in that they infect the erythrocytes of their hosts sloths All species are confined to Central and South America 27 E colombiensis infections have been found in man Sauroleishmania was originally described by Ranquein 1973 as a separate genus but molecular studies suggest this is actually a subgenus rather than a separate genus The proposed division of the Leishmania into Euleishmania and Paraleishmania groups in 2000 emphasized the deep phylogenic distance between parasites some of which had been named as Leishmania species 28 The Euleishmania included species currently placed in the subgenera Leishmania Sauroleishmania Mundinia and Viannia The proposed Paraleishmania included species of Endotypanum Leishmamnia L colomubensis L herreri L hertigiand L deanei and L equatorensis In a recent revision these species were given different generic status Four subgenera of Leishmania are now recognised Leishmania Sauroleishmania Viannia and Mundinia the L enriettii complex The genus Endotrypanum and Porcisia belong to the Paraleishmania There are four Mundinia species L Mundinia enriettii L Mundinia martiniquensis L Mundinia macropodum and L Mundinia orientalis which is found in Thailand 29 L archibaldi s specific status is unsettled but it is closely related to L donovani L herreri belongs to the genus Endotypanum rather than to Leishmania L donovani and L infantum are closely related Notes edit The selenoenzyme Seltryp appears to be unique to this order 30 It has been removed from the subgenus Viannia L deanei and L hertigi both of which infect porcupines have been moved to the genus Porcisia Classification editSubgenus Leishmania Ross 1903 sensu Saf janova 1982 Leishmania aethiopica Bray Ashford amp Bray 1973 Leishmania amazonensis Lainson amp Shaw 1972 includes garnhami Scorza et al 1979 Leishmania arabica Peters Elbihari amp Evans 1986 Leishmania aristidesi Lainson amp Shaw 1979 Leishmania donovani Laveran amp Mesnil 1903 Leishmania forattiniiYoshida Cuba Pacheco Cupolillo Tavares Machado Homen amp Grimaldi 1993 Leishmania gerbilliWang Qu amp Guan 1964 Leishmania infantum Nicolle 1908 subspecies chagasi Cunha amp Chagas 1937 Leishmania killicki Rioux Lamotte amp Pratlong 1986 Leishmania major Yakimoff amp Schokhor 1914 Leishmania mexicana Biagi 1953 Leishmania pifanoi Medina amp Romero 1959 Leishmania tropica Wright 1903 Leishmania turanica Strelkova Shurkhal Kellina Eliseev Evans Peters Chapman Le Blancq amp van Eys 1990 Leishmania venezeulensis Bonfante Garrido 1980 Leishmania waltoni Shaw Pratlong amp Dedet 2015Subgenus Mundinia Shaw Camargo and Teixeira 2016 Leishmania enriettii Muniz amp Medina 1948 Leishmania macropodum Barratt Kaufer Peters Craig Lawrence Roberts Lee McAuliffe Stark Ellis 2017 Leishmania martiniquensis Desbois Pratlong Quist and Dedet 2014 31 Leishmania orientalisJariyapan Daroontum Jaiwong Chanmol Intakhan Sor Suwan Siriyasatien Somboon Bates Bates 2018Subgenus Sauroleishmania Ranque 1973 sensu Saf janova 1982 Leishmania adleri Heisch 1958 Leishmania agamae David 1929 Leishmania ceramodactyli Adler amp Theodor 1929 Leishmania gulikae Ovezmukhammedov amp Saf janova 1987 Leishmania gymnodactyli Khodukin amp Sofiev 1940 Leishmania helioscopi Chodukin amp Sofiev 1940 Leishmania hemidactyli Mackie Gupta amp Swaminath 1923 Leishmania hoogstraali McMillan 1965 Leishmania nicollei Chodukin amp Sofieff 1940 Leishmania platycephala Telford 2009 Leishmania phrynocephali Chodukin amp Sofieff 1940 Leishmania senegalensis Ranque 1973 Leishmania sofieffi Markov Lukina amp Markova 1964 Leishmania tarentolae Wenyon 1921 Leishmania zmeevi Andruchko amp Markov 1955 Leishmania zuckermani Paperna Boulard Hering Hagenbeck amp Landau 2001 Species described as Sauroleishmania Their development is not like other members of the subgenus and so their taxonomic position is doubtful Subgenus Viannia Lainson amp Shaw 1987 Leishmania braziliensis Vianna 1911 Leishmania guyanensis Floch 1954 Leishmania lainsoni Silveira Shaw Braga amp Ishikawa 1987 Leishmania lindenbergi Silveira Ishikawa De Souza amp Lainson 2002 Leishmania naiffi Lainson amp Shaw 1989 Leishmania panamensis Lainson amp Shaw 1972 Leishmania peruviana Velez 1913 Leishmania shawi Lainson Braga amp de Souza 1989 Leishmania utingensis Braga Lainson Ishikawa amp Shaw 2003Related genera edit The relationships between Leishmania and other genera such as Endotrypanum Novymonas Porcisia and Zelonia is presently unclear as they are closely related 32 13 Endotrypanum colombiensis ofter known as Leishmania colombiensis has been associated with both cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis in Venezuela 33 Genus Endotrypanum Endotrypanum colombiensis Kreutzer Corredor Grimaldi Grogl Rowton Young Morales McMahon Pratt Guzman amp Tesh 1991 Endotrypanum equatorensis Grimaldi Kreutzer Hashiguchi Gomet Mimory amp Tesh 1992 Endotrypanum herreri Zeledon Ponce amp Murillo 1979 Endotrypanum monterogeii Shaw 1969 Endotrypanum schaudinni Mesnil and Brimont 1908Genus Novymonas Kostygov and Yurchenko 2016 Novymonas esmeraldas Votypka Kostygov Maslov and Lukes 2016Genus Porcisia Shaw Camargo and Teixeira 2016 Porcisia deanei Lainson amp Shaw 1977 Porcisia hertigi Herrer 1971Genus Zelonia Shaw Camargo and Teixeira 2016 Zelonia australiensis Barratt Kaufer Peters Craig Lawrence Roberts Lee McAuliffe Stark Ellis 2017 Zelonia costaricensis Yurchenko Lukes Jirku Zeledon Maslov 2006Biochemistry and cell biology editThe biochemistry and cell biology of Leishmania is similar to that of other kinetoplastids They share the same main morphological features a single flagellum which has an invagination the flagellar pocket at its base a kinetoplast which is found in the single mitochondrion and a subpelicular array of microtubules which make up the main part of the cytoskeleton Lipophosphoglycan coat edit Leishmania possesses a lipophosphoglycan coat over the outside of the cell Lipophosphoglycan is a trigger for toll like receptor 2 a signalling receptor involved in triggering an innate immune response in mammals The precise structure of lipophosphoglycan varies depending on the species and lifecycle stage of the parasite The glycan component is particularly variable and different lipophosphoglycan variants can be used as a molecular marker for different lifecycle stages Lectins a group of proteins which bind different glycans are often used to detect these lipophosphoglycan variants For example peanut agglutinin binds a particular lipophosphoglycan found on the surface of the infective form of L major Lipophosphoglycan is used by the parasite to promote its survival in the host and the mechanisms by which the parasite does this center around modulating the immune response of the host This is vital as the Leishmania parasites live within macrophages and need to prevent the macrophages from killing them Lipophosphoglycan has a role in resisting the complement system inhibiting the oxidative burst response inducing an inflammation response and preventing natural killer T cells recognising that the macrophage is infected with the Leishmania parasite Type Pathogen LocationCutaneous leishmaniasis localised and diffuse infections appear as obvious skin reactions The most common is the Oriental Sore caused by Old World species L major L tropica and L aethiopica In the New World the most common culprits is L mexicana Cutaneous infections are most common in Afghanistan Brazil Iran Peru Saudi Arabia and Syria Mucocutaneous leishmaniasis infections start off as a reaction at the bite and can go by metastasis into the mucous membrane and become fatal L braziliensis Mucocutaneous infections are most common in Bolivia Brazil and Peru Mucocutaneous infections are also found in Karamay China Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Visceral leishmaniasis infections are often recognised by fever swelling of the liver and spleen and anemia They are known by many local names of which the most common is probably kala azar 34 35 Caused exclusively by species of the L donovani complex L donovani L infantum syn L chagasi 2 Found in tropical and subtropical areas of all continents except Australia visceral infections are most common in Bangladesh Brazil India Nepal and Sudan 2 Visceral leishmaniasis also found in part of China such as Sichuan Province Gansu Province and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Intracellular mechanism of infection edit In order to avoid destruction by the immune system and thrive the Leishmania hides inside its host s cells This location enables it to avoid the action of the humoral immune response because the pathogen is safely inside a cell and outside the open bloodstream and furthermore it may prevent the immune system from destroying its host through nondanger surface signals which discourage apoptosis The primary cell types Leishmania infiltrates are phagocytotic cells such as neutrophils and macrophages 36 Usually a phagocytotic immune cell like a macrophage will ingest a pathogen within an enclosed endosome and then fill this endosome with enzymes which digest the pathogen However in the case of Leishmania these enzymes have no effect allowing the parasite to multiply rapidly This uninhibited growth of parasites eventually overwhelms the host macrophage or other immune cell causing it to die 37 Transmitted by the sandfly the protozoan parasites of L major may switch the strategy of the first immune defense from eating inflammation killing to eating no inflammation no killing of their host phagocyte and corrupt it for their own benefit citation needed They use the willingly phagocytosing polymorphonuclear neutrophil granulocytes PMNs rigorously as a tricky hideout where they proliferate unrecognized from the immune system and enter the long lived macrophages to establish a hidden infection citation needed Uptake and survival edit nbsp Lifecycle of LeishmaniaUpon microbial infection PMNs move out from the bloodstream through the vessels endothelial layer to the site of the infected tissue dermal tissue after fly bite They immediately initiate the first immune response and phagocytize the invader by recognition of foreign and activating surfaces on the parasite Activated PMN secrete chemokines IL 8 particularly to attract further granulocytes and stimulate phagocytosis Further L major increases the secretion of IL 8 by PMNs This mechanism is observed during infection with other obligate intracellular parasites as well For microbes like these multiple intracellular survival mechanisms exist Surprisingly the coinjection of apoptotic and viable pathogens causes by far a more fulminate course of disease than injection of only viable parasites When the anti inflammatory signal phosphatidylserine usually found on apoptotic cells is exposed on the surface of dead parasites L major switches off the oxidative burst thereby preventing killing and degradation of the viable pathogen In the case of Leishmania progeny are not generated in PMNs but in this way they can survive and persist untangled in the primary site of infection The promastigote forms also release Leishmania chemotactic factor LCF to actively recruit neutrophils but not other leukocytes for instance monocytes or NK cells In addition to that the production of interferon gamma IFNg inducible protein 10 IP10 by PMNs is blocked in attendance of Leishmania what involves the shut down of inflammatory and protective immune response by NK and Th1 cell recruitment The pathogens stay viable during phagocytosis since their primary hosts the PMNs expose apoptotic cell associated molecular pattern ACAMP signaling no pathogen Persistency and attraction edit The lifespan of neutrophil granulocytes is quite short They circulate in bloodstream for about 6 to 10 hours after leaving bone marrow whereupon they undergo spontaneous apoptosis Microbial pathogens have been reported to influence cellular apoptosis by different strategies Obviously because of the inhibition of caspase3 activation L major can induce the delay of neutrophils apoptosis and extend their lifespan for at least 2 3 days The fact of extended lifespan is very beneficial for the development of infection because the final host cells for these parasites are macrophages which normally migrate to the sites of infection within two or three days The pathogens are not dronish instead they take over the command at the primary site of infection They induce the production by PMNs of the chemokines MIP 1a and MIP 1b macrophage inflammatory protein to recruit macrophages 38 An important factor in prolonging infection is the inhibition of the adaptive immune system This occurs especially during the intercellular phases when amastigotes search for new macrophages to infect and are more susceptible to immune responses Nearly all types of phagocytes are targeted 39 For example mincle has been shown to be targeted by L major Interaction between mincle and a protein released by the parasite results in a weakened immune response in dendritic cells 40 Silent phagocytosis theory edit To save the integrity of the surrounding tissue from the toxic cell components and proteolytic enzymes contained in neutrophils the apoptotic PMNs are silently cleared by macrophages Dying PMNs expose the eat me signal phosphatidylserine which is transferred to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane during apoptosis By reason of delayed apoptosis the parasites that persist in PMNs are taken up into macrophages employing an absolutely physiological and nonphlogistic process The strategy of this silent phagocytosis has the following advantages for the parasite Taking up apoptotic cells silences macrophage killing activity leading to a survival of the pathogens Pathogens inside of PMNs have no direct contact to the macrophage surface receptors because they can not see the parasite inside the apoptotic cell So the activation of the phagocyte for immune activation does not occur However studies have shown this is unlikely as the pathogens are seen to leave apoptopic cells and no evidence is known of macrophage uptake by this method Molecular biology editAn important aspect of the Leishmania protozoan is its glycoconjugate layer of lipophosphoglycan LPG This is held together with a phosphoinositide membrane anchor and has a tripartite structure consisting of a lipid domain a neutral hexasaccharide and a phosphorylated galactose mannose with a termination in a neutral cap Not only do these parasites develop postphlebotomus digestion but it is also thought to be essential to oxidative bursts thus allowing passage for infection Characteristics of intracellular digestion include an endosome fusing with a lysosome releasing acid hydrolases which degrade DNA RNA proteins and carbohydrates Genomics edit nbsp Leishmania tropicaThe genomes of four Leishmania species L major L infantum L donovani and L braziliensis have been sequenced revealing more than 8300 protein coding and 900 RNA genes Almost 40 of protein coding genes fall into 662 families containing between two and 500 members Most of the smaller gene families are tandem arrays of one to three genes while the larger gene families are often dispersed in tandem arrays at different loci throughout the genome Each of the 35 or 36 chromosomes is organized into a small number of gene clusters of tens to hundreds of genes on the same DNA strand These clusters can be organized in head to head divergent or tail to tail convergent fashion with the latter often separated by tRNA rRNA and or snRNA genes Transcription of protein coding genes initiates bidirectionally in the divergent strand switch regions between gene clusters and extends polycistronically through each gene cluster before terminating in the strand switch region separating convergent clusters Leishmania telomeres are usually relatively small consisting of a few different types of repeat sequence Evidence can be found for recombination between several different groups of telomeres The L major and L infantum genomes contain only about 50 copies of inactive degenerated Ingi L1Tc related elements DIREs while L braziliensis also contains several telomere associated transposable elements and spliced leader associated retroelements The Leishmania genomes share a conserved core proteome of about 6200 genes with the related trypanosomatids Trypanosoma brucei and Trypanosoma cruzi but around 1000 Leishmania specific genes are known which are mostly randomly distributed throughout the genome Relatively few about 200 species specific differences in gene content exist between the three sequenced Leishmania genomes but about 8 of the genes appear to be evolving at different rates between the three species indicative of different selective pressures that could be related to disease pathology About 65 of protein coding genes currently lack functional assignment 3 Leishmania species produce several different heat shock proteins These include Hsp83 a homolog of Hsp90 A regulatory element in the 3 UTR of Hsp83 controls translation of Hsp83 in a temperature sensitive manner This region forms a stable RNA structure which melts at higher temperatures 41 Genomic instability editLeishmania lacks of promoter dependent regulation so its genomic regulation is at post transcriptional level through copy number variations CNV of transcripts a mechanism capable of controlling the abundance of these transcripts according to the situation in which the organism finds itself These processes cause a great susceptibility to genomic instability in the parasite This involves epistatic interactions between genes which drive these changes in gene expression leading to compensatory mechanisms in the Leishmania genome that result in the adaptive evolution of the parasite During the research carried out by Giovanni Bussotti and collaborators at the Pasteur Institute belonging to the University of Paris a genome wide association study GWAS of Leishmania donovani identified CNVs in 14 of the coding regions and in 4 of the non coding regions In addition an experimental evolution study EE Approach was performed on L donovani amastigotes obtained from clinical cases of hamsters By extracting these amastigotes from infected organisms and culturing them in vitro for 36 weeks 3800 generations it was demonstrated how genomic instability in this parasite is capable of adapting to complicated situations such as in vitro culture An 11kb deletion was detected in the gene coding for Ld1S 360735700 a NIMA related kinase with key functions in the correct progression of mitosis With the advancement of in vitro culture generations the loss of the kinase becomes more notorious decreasing growth rate of the parasite but the genomic instability of Leishmania manages through compensatory mechanisms to attenuate this reduction in growth so that the in vitro culture is maintained First as an adaptation of the culture to the loss of this kinase it was detected an increase in the expression of another orthologous kinase Ld1S 360735800 whose coding region is adjacent to that of the lost kinase Secondly a reduction in the expression of 23 transcripts related to flagellar biogenesis was observed So adaptation in Leishmania leads the parasite to eliminate flagellar movement from its needs since it is not necessary in in vitro culture preserving the energy invested in this movement to increase the growth rate and compensating the loss of the kinase Finally coamplification of ribosomal protein clusters ribosomal RNA rRNA transfer RNA tRNA and nucleolar small RNA snoRNA was observed Increased expression of these clusters leads to increased ribosomal biogenesis and protein biosynthesis This is most evident in the case of small nucleolar RNAs snoRNA for which amplification of a large cluster of 15 snoRNAs was observed on chromosome 33 The function of these nucleic acids is methylation and inclusion of pseuouridine in ribosomes In this case an increase in these modifications was observed in the large subunits of the ribosomes of individuals in culture specifically in the PTC peptidyl transferase center and in the mRNA entry tunnel to the ribosome for protein synthesis These changes lead to an increase in ribosomal biogenesis resulting in increased protein synthesis and growth rate In conclusion the loss of the kinase is compensated by the genomic instability of Leishmania donovani by increasing the expression of another orthologous kinase decreasing flagellar biogenesis and increasing ribosomal biogenesis These compensations result in the growth rate of the culture being as less affected as possible by the initial loss of the kinase and the parasite is perfectly adapted to the in vitro culture which is not its natural habitat 42 Sexual reproduction editA microbial pathogen s reproductive system is one of the basic biologic processes that condition the microorganism s ecology and disease spread 43 In 2009 Akopyants et al 44 demonstrated that L major has a sexual cycle including a meiotic process Hybrid progeny are formed that have full genomic complements from both parents Mating only occurs in the sand fly vector and hybrids can be transmitted to the mammalian host by sand fly bite In L braziliensis matings in nature are predominantly between related individuals resulting in extreme inbreeding 45 The rate of outcrossing between different strains of Leishmania in the sand fly vector depends on the frequency of co infection Such outcrossing events appear to be rare in L major 44 and L donovani 46 L infantum produces proteins BRCA1 and RAD51 that interact with each other to promote homologous recombinational repair 47 These proteins play a key role in meiosis Thus meiotic events provide the adaptive advantage of efficient recombinational repair of DNA damages even when they do not lead to outcrossing 48 See also editCanine leishmaniasis List of parasites human References edit leishmania The Chambers Dictionary 9th ed Chambers 2003 ISBN 0 550 10105 5 a b c Ryan KJ Ray CG editors 2004 Sherris Medical Microbiology 4th ed McGraw Hill pp 749 54 ISBN 0 8385 8529 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Myler P Fasel N editors 2008 Leishmania After The Genome Caister Academic Press ISBN 978 1 904455 28 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ansari MY Equbal A Dikhit MR Mansuri R Rana S Ali V Sahoo GC Das P Nov 2015 Establishment of Correlation between In Silico amp In Vitro Test Analysis against Leishmania HGPRT to inhibitors International Journal of Biological Macromolecules 83 78 96 doi 10 1016 j ijbiomac 2015 11 051 PMID 26616453 WHO 2010 Annual report Geneva Poinar G 2008 Lutzomyia adiketis sp n Diptera Phlebotomidae a vector of Paleoleishmania neotropicum sp n Kinetoplastida Trypanosomatidae in Dominican amber Parasit Vectors 1 1 2 doi 10 1186 1756 3305 1 22 PMC 2491605 PMID 18627624 Cox F E G 2002 History of Human Parasitology Clinical Microbiology Reviews 15 4 595 612 doi 10 1128 CMR 15 4 595 612 2002 PMC 126866 PMID 12364371 Yanik M et al 2004 The psychological impact of cutaneous leishmaniasis Clinical and Experimental Dermatology 29 5 464 467 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2230 2004 01605 x PMID 15347324 S2CID 11543741 Thakur Lovlesh Singh Kiran K Shanker Vinay Negi Ajeet Jain Aklank Matlashewski Greg Jain Manju 2018 Atypical leishmaniasis A global perspective with emphasis on the Indian subcontinent PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 12 9 e0006659 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0006659 ISSN 1935 2735 PMC 6159859 PMID 30260957 Thakur Lovlesh Singh Kiran K Kushwaha Hemant R Sharma Sudarshan K Shankar Vinay Negi Ajeet Verma Ghanshyam Kumari Sandhya Jain Aklank Jain Manju 2020 Leishmania donovani Infection with Atypical Cutaneous Manifestations Himachal Pradesh India 2014 2018 Emerging Infectious Diseases 26 8 1864 1869 doi 10 3201 eid2608 191761 ISSN 1080 6059 PMC 7392404 PMID 32687048 Steverding Dietmar 2017 The history of leishmaniasis Parasites amp Vectors 10 1 82 doi 10 1186 s13071 017 2028 5 ISSN 1756 3305 PMC 5312593 PMID 28202044 Cox Francis E G 2017 The Golden Age of parasitology 1875 1925 the Scottish contributions Parasitology 144 12 1567 1581 doi 10 1017 S0031182016001566 ISSN 1469 8161 PMID 27628769 S2CID 30381476 a b Mathison Blaine A Bradbury Richard S Pritt Bobbi S 2021 Medical Parasitology Taxonomy Update January 2018 to May 2020 Journal of Clinical Microbiology 59 2 e01308 20 doi 10 1128 JCM 01308 20 ISSN 1098 660X PMC 8111142 PMID 33028601 Morphology and Life Cycle UCLA Retrieved 24 January 2014 Pulvertaft RJ Hoyle GF 1960 Stages in the life cycle of Leishmania donovani Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 54 2 191 6 doi 10 1016 0035 9203 60 90057 2 PMID 14435316 Hughes AL Piontkivska H 2003 Phylogeny of Trypanosomatidae and Bodonidae Kinetoplastida based on 18S rRNA evidence for paraphyly of Trypanosoma and six other genera Mol Biol Evol 20 4 644 652 doi 10 1093 molbev msg062 PMID 12679543 Momen H Cupolillo E 2000 Speculations on the origin and evolution of the genus Leishmania Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 95 4 583 8 doi 10 1590 S0074 02762000000400023 PMID 10904419 Noyes HA Morrison DA Chance ML Ellis JT 2000 Evidence for a neotropical origin of Leishmania Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 95 4 575 8 doi 10 1590 S0074 02762000000400021 PMID 10904417 Kerr SF 2000 Palaearctic origin of Leishmania Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 95 1 75 80 doi 10 1590 S0074 02762000000100011 PMID 10656708 Kuhls Katrin Alam Mohammad Zahangir Cupolillo Elisa Ferreira Gabriel Eduardo M Mauricio Isabel L Oddone Rolando Feliciangeli M Dora Wirth Thierry Miles Michael A Schonian Gabriele Kamhawi Shaden 7 June 2011 Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 5 6 e1155 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0001155 PMC 3110170 PMID 21666787 Duprey Z H Steurer F J Rooney J A Kirchhoff L V Jackson J E Rowton E D Schantz P M 2006 Canine Visceral Leishmaniasis United States and Canada 2000 2003 Emerging Infectious Diseases 12 3 440 446 doi 10 3201 eid1203 050811 PMC 3291440 PMID 16704782 Noyes HA Arana BA Chance ML Maingon R 1997 The Leishmania hertigi Kinetoplastida Trypanosomatidae complex and the lizard Leishmania their classification and evidence for a neotropical origin of the Leishmania Endotrypanum clade J Eukaryot Microbiol 44 5 511 557 doi 10 1111 j 1550 7408 1997 tb05732 x PMID 9304821 S2CID 27460253 Harkins Kelly M Schwartz Rachel S Cartwright Reed A Stone Anne C 2016 Phylogenomic reconstruction supports supercontinent origins for Leishmania Infection Genetics and Evolution 38 101 9 doi 10 1016 j meegid 2015 11 030 PMID 26708057 Croan David G Morrison David A Ellis John T 1997 Evolution of the genus Leishmania revealed by comparison of DNA and RNA polymerase gene sequences Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 89 2 149 59 doi 10 1016 S0166 6851 97 00111 4 PMID 9364962 Jennings Y L de Souza A A A Ishikawa E A Shaw J Lainson R Silveira F 2014 Phenotypic characterization of Leishmania spp causing cutaneous leishmaniasis in the lower Amazon region western Para state Brazil reveals a putative hybrid parasite Leishmania Viannia guyanensis Leishmania Viannia shawi shawi Parasite 21 39 doi 10 1051 parasite 2014039 PMC 4118625 PMID 25083790 Espinosa O A Serrano M G Camargo E P M M G Teixeira J J Shaw 2016 An appraisal of the taxonomy and nomenclature of trypanosomatids presently classified as Leishmania and Endotrypanum Parasitology 145 4 430 442 doi 10 1017 S0031182016002092 PMID 27976601 S2CID 41544524 Franco AM Grimaldi G Jr 1999 Characterization of Endotrypanum Kinetoplastida Trypanosomatidae a unique parasite infecting the neotropical tree sloths Edentata Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 94 2 261 268 doi 10 1590 s0074 02761999000200026 PMID 10224540 Momen H Cupolillo E 2000 Speculations on the origin and evolution of the genus Leishmania Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 95 4 583 588 doi 10 1590 s0074 02762000000400023 PMID 10904419 Jariyapan N Daroontum T Jaiwong K Chanmol W Intakhan N Sor Suwan S Siriyasatien P Somboon P Bates MD Bates PA 2018 Leishmania Mundinia orientalis n sp Trypanosomatidae a parasite from Thailand responsible for localised cutaneous leishmaniasis Parasit Vectors 11 1 351 doi 10 1186 s13071 018 2908 3 PMC 6006788 PMID 29914526 Bonilla Mariana Krull Erika Irigoin Florencia Salinas Gustavo Comini Marcelo A 2016 Selenoproteins of African trypanosomes are dispensable for parasite survival in a mammalian host Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 206 1 2 13 19 doi 10 1016 j molbiopara 2016 03 002 PMID 26975431 Desbois Nicole Pratlong Francine Quist Daniele Dedet Jean Pierre 2014 Leishmania Leishmania martiniquensis n sp Kinetoplastida Trypanosomatidae description of the parasite responsible for cutaneous leishmaniasis in Martinique Island French West Indies Parasite 21 12 doi 10 1051 parasite 2014011 ISSN 1776 1042 PMC 3952653 PMID 24626346 nbsp Espinosa O A Serrano M G Camargo E P Teixeira M M G Shaw J J 2018 An appraisal of the taxonomy and nomenclature of trypanosomatids presently classified as Leishmania and Endotrypanum Parasitology 145 4 430 442 doi 10 1017 S0031182016002092 ISSN 1469 8161 PMID 27976601 S2CID 41544524 Rodriguez Bonfante Claudina Bonfante Garrido Rafael Grimaldi Gabriel Momen Hooman Cupolillo Elisa 2003 Genotypically distinct Leishmania colombiensis isolates from Venezuela cause both cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis in humans Infection Genetics and Evolution Journal of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics in Infectious Diseases 3 2 119 124 doi 10 1016 s1567 1348 03 00012 1 ISSN 1567 1348 PMID 12809806 Visceral leishmniasis The disease Archived 2005 04 28 at the Wayback Machine kala azar Archived 2009 02 10 at the Wayback Machine The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Vannier Santos MA Martiny A de Souza W August 2002 Cell biology of Leishmania spp invading and evading Current Pharmaceutical Design 8 4 297 318 doi 10 2174 1381612023396230 PMID 11860368 Paul William E September 1993 Infectious Diseases and the Immune System Scientific American 269 3 94 95 Bibcode 1993SciAm 269c 90P doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0993 90 PMID 8211095 Laskay T et al 2003 Neutrophil granulocytes Trojan horses for Leishmania major and other intracellular microbes Trends in Microbiology 11 5 210 4 doi 10 1016 S0966 842X 03 00075 1 PMID 12781523 Martinez Lopez M et al 2018 Leishmania Hijacks Myeloid Cells for Immune Escape Frontiers in Microbiology 9 883 doi 10 3389 fmicb 2018 00883 PMC 5949370 PMID 29867798 Iborra S et al 2016 Leishmania uses Mincle to target an inhibitory ITAM signaling pathway in dendritic cells that dampens adaptive immunity to infection Immunity 45 4 788 801 doi 10 1016 j immuni 2016 09 012 PMC 5074365 PMID 27742545 David M Gabdank I Ben David M Zilka A Orr I Barash D Shapira M February 2010 Preferential translation of Hsp83 in Leishmania requires a thermosensitive polypyrimidine rich element in the 3 UTR and involves scanning of the 5 UTR RNA 16 2 364 74 doi 10 1261 rna 1874710 PMC 2811665 PMID 20040590 Bussotti Giovanni Piel Laura Pescher Pascale Domagalska Malgorzata A Rajan K Shanmugha Cohen Chalamish Smadar Doniger Tirza Hiregange Disha Gajanan Myler Peter J Unger Ron Michaeli Shulamit Spath Gerald F 21 December 2021 Genome instability drives epistatic adaptation in the human pathogen Leishmania Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118 51 e2113744118 Bibcode 2021PNAS 11813744B doi 10 1073 pnas 2113744118 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 8713814 PMID 34903666 Rougeron V De Meeus T Kako Ouraga S Hide M Banuls AL 2010 Everything you always wanted to know about sex but were afraid to ask in Leishmania after two decades of laboratory and field analyses PLOS Pathog 6 8 e1001004 doi 10 1371 journal ppat 1001004 PMC 2924324 PMID 20808896 a b Akopyants NS Kimblin N Secundino N Patrick R Peters N Lawyer P Dobson DE Beverley SM Sacks DL April 2009 Demonstration of genetic exchange during cyclical development of Leishmania in the sand fly vector Science 324 5924 265 8 Bibcode 2009Sci 324 265A doi 10 1126 science 1169464 PMC 2729066 PMID 19359589 Rougeron V De Meeus T Hide M Waleckx E Bermudez H Arevalo J Llanos Cuentas A Dujardin JC De Doncker S Le Ray D Ayala FJ Banuls AL June 2009 Extreme inbreeding in Leishmania braziliensis Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106 25 10224 9 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10610224R doi 10 1073 pnas 0904420106 PMC 2700931 PMID 19497885 Rogers MB Downing T Smith BA Imamura H Sanders M Svobodova M Volf P Berriman M Cotton JA Smith DF January 2014 Genomic confirmation of hybridisation and recent inbreeding in a vector isolated Leishmania population PLOS Genet 10 1 e1004092 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1004092 PMC 3894156 PMID 24453988 Genois MM Mukherjee A Ubeda JM Buisson R Paquet E Roy G Plourde M Coulombe Y Ouellette M Masson JY August 2012 Interactions between BRCA2 and RAD51 for promoting homologous recombination in Leishmania infantum Nucleic Acids Res 40 14 6570 84 doi 10 1093 nar gks306 PMC 3413117 PMID 22505581 Bernstein H Byerly HC Hopf FA Michod RE Genetic damage mutation and the evolution of sex Science 1985 Sep 20 229 4719 1277 81 doi 10 1126 science 3898363 PMID 3898363Further reading editVan Zandbergen G Bollinger A Wenzel A Kamhawi S Voll R Klinger M Muller A Holscher C Herrmann M Sacks D Solbach W Laskay T 2006 Leishmania disease development depends on the presence of apoptotic promastigotes in the virulent inoculum Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 37 13837 42 Bibcode 2006PNAS 10313837V doi 10 1073 pnas 0600843103 PMC 1564231 PMID 16945916 Shaw Jeffrey Jon 1969 The Haemoflagellates of Sloths H K Lewis amp Co Ltd London Ansari MY Dikhit MR Sahoo GC Das P 2012 Comparative modeling of HGPRT enzyme of L donovani and binding affinities of different analogs of GMP Int J Biol Macromol 50 3 637 49 doi 10 1016 j ijbiomac 2012 01 010 PMID 22327112 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leishmania A discussion list Leish L is also available with over 600 subscribers to the list ranging from molecular biologists to public health workers from many countries both inside and outside endemic regions Comments and questions are welcomed KBD Kinetoplastid Biology and Disease is a website devoted to leishmaniasis sleeping sickness and Chagas disease American trypanosomiasis It contains free access to full text peer reviewed articles on these subjects The site contains many articles relating to the unique kinetoplastid organelle and genetic material therein Drug Search for Leishmaniasis World Community Grid Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leishmania amp oldid 1186939894, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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