Leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania parasite is a global threat to public health and one of the most neglected tropical diseases. Therefore, the discovery of novel drug targets and effective drug is a major challenge and an important goal. Leishmania is an obligate intracellular parasite that alternates between sand fly and human host. To survive and establish infections, Leishmania parasites scavenge and internalize nutrients from the host. Nevertheless, host cells presents mechanism like nutrient restriction to inhibit microbial growth and control infection. Zinc is crucial for cellular growth and disruption in its homeostasis hinders growth and survival in many cells. However, little is known about the role of zinc in Leishmania growth and survival. In this study, the effect of zinc on the growth and survival of L.donovani was analyzed by both Zinc-depletion and Zinc-supplementation using Zinc-specific chelator N, N, N', N'–tetrakis (2-pyridylmethyl) ethylenediamine (TPEN) and Zinc Sulfate (ZnSO4). Treatment of parasites with TPEN rather than ZnSO4 had significantly affected the growth in a dose- and time-dependent manner. The pre-treatment of promastigotes with TPEN resulted into reduced host-parasite interaction as indicated by decreased association index. Zn depletion resulted into flux in intracellular labile Zn pool and increased in ROS generation correlated with decreased intracellular total thiol and retention of plasma membrane integrity without phosphatidylserine exposure in TPEN treated promastigotes. We also observed that TPEN-induced Zn depletion resulted into collapse of mitochondrial membrane potential which is associated with increase in cytosolic calcium and cytochrome-c. DNA fragmentation analysis showed increased DNA fragments in Zn-depleted cells. In summary, intracellular Zn depletion in the L. donovani promastigotes led to ROS-mediated caspase-independent mitochondrial dysfunction resulting into apoptosis-like cell death. Therefore, cellular zinc homeostasis in Leishmania can be explored for new drug targets and chemotherapeutics to control Leishmanial growth and disease progression.
It is hypothesized that hypertriglyceridemia could be of additional diagnostic benefit to assess the probability and severity of VL in endemic areas.
In this work, we have described the expression of ecto-ATPDase on the external surface of Leishmania donovani. This enzyme has the ability to hydrolyze extracellular ATP. There is a low level of ATP hydrolysis in the absence of divalent cation 2.5 ± 0.51 nM Pi 10 cells/h which shows the divalent cation-dependent activity of this enzyme in the intact parasite. However, MgCl stimulated the ATP hydrolysis to a greater extent compared with CaCl and ZnCl. This activity was also observed when replaced by MnCl. The Mg-dependent ecto-ATPase activity was 46.58 ± 6.248 nM Pi 10 cells/h. The apparent K for ATP was 5.76 mM. Since Leishmania also possesses acid phosphatase activity and to discard the possibility that the observed ATP hydrolysis was due to acid phosphatase, the effect of pH was examined. In the pH range 6.0-9.0, in which the cells were viable, the phosphatase activity decreased while ATPase activity increased. To show that the observed ATP hydrolysis was not due to phosphatase or nucleotidase activity, certain inhibitors for these enzymes were tested. Vandate and NaF inhibited the phosphatase activity; Ammonium molybdate inhibited 5'-nucleotidase activity, but these inhibitors did not inhibit the observed ATP hydrolysis. However, when ADP was used as a substrate, there was no inhibition of ATP hydrolysis showing the possibility of ATP diphosphohydrolase activity. To confirm that this Mg-dependent ATPase activity is an ecto-ATPase activity, we used an impermeable inhibitor, 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene 2,-2'-disulfonic acid, as well as suramin, an antagonist of P2-purinoceptors and inhibitor of some ecto-ATPases. These two reagents inhibited the Mg-dependent ATPase activity in a dose-dependent manner. The presence of L. donovani E-NTPDase activity was demonstrated using antibodies against NTPDase by Western blotting and flow cytometry. The presence of Mg-dependent ATP diphosphohydrolase activity on the surface of L. donovani modulates the nucleotide concentration and protects the parasite from the lytic effects of the nucleotides mainly ATP. Ecto-ATPDase from L. donovani may be further characterized as a good antigen and as a target for immunodiagnosis and drug development, respectively.
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