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The major surface protease (MSP or GP63) in the intracellular amastigote stage of Leishmania chagasi

Authors :
Hsiao, Chia-Hung Christine
Yao, Chaoqun
Storlie, Patricia
Donelson, John E.
Wilson, Mary E.
Source :
Molecular & Biochemical Parasitology. Feb2008, Vol. 157 Issue 2, p148-159. 12p.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Abstract: The Leishmania spp. protozoa have an abundant surface metalloprotease called MSP (major surface protease), which in Leishmania chagasi is encoded by three distinct gene classes (MSPS, MSPL, MSPC). Although MSP has been characterized primarily in extracellular promastigotes, it also facilitates survival of intracellular amastigotes. Promastigotes express MSPS, MSPL, and two forms of MSPC RNAs, whereas amastigotes express only MSPL RNA and one MSPC transcript. We confirmed the presence of MSPC protein in both promastigotes and amastigotes by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). More than 10 MSP isoforms were visualized in both amastigotes and promastigotes using two-dimensional immunoblots, but amastigote MSPs migrated at a more acidic pI. Promastigote MSPs were N-glycosylated, whereas most amastigote MSPs were not. Immuno-electron microscopy showed that two-thirds of the promastigote MSP is distributed along the cell surface. In contrast, most amastigote MSP localized at the flagellar pocket, the major site of leishmania endocytosis/exocytosis. Biochemical analyses indicated that most amastigote MSP is soluble in the cytosol, vesicles or organelles, whereas most promastigote MSP is membrane-associated and GPI anchored. Activity gels and immunoblots confirmed the presence of a novel proteolytically active amastigote MSP of higher Mr than the promastigote MSPs. Furthermore, promastigote MSP is shed extracellularly whereas MSP is not shed from axenic amastigotes. We conclude that amastigotes and promastigotes both express multiple MSP isoforms, but these MSPs differ biochemically and localize differently in the two parasite stages. We hypothesize that MSP plays different roles in the extracellular versus intracellular forms of Leishmania spp. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01666851
Volume :
157
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular & Biochemical Parasitology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28402735
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molbiopara.2007.10.008