Leishmania tropica: intraspecific polymorphisms in lipophosphoglycan correlate with transmission by different Phlebotomus species.
Exp Parasitol
; 107(1-2): 105-14, 2004.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-15208044
Lipophosphoglycan (LPG) is a dominant surface molecule of Leishmania promastigotes which has been shown to be critical for parasite-sand fly vector interactions. To provide additional evidence for its importance in transmission, the LPGs from three Leishmania tropica strains that differ in their capability to infect sand flies, were biochemically characterized. One of these strains, ISER/IL/98/LRC-L747, was isolated from a Phlebotomus sergenti female collected in the Judean Desert close to Jerusalem. The other strains originated from a different focus in the Galilee region of northern Israel. One was isolated from a patient (MHOM/IL/02/Ofri-LRC-L863) and the other from a naturally infected Phlebotomus arabicus female (IARA/IL/00/Amnunfly1-LRC-L810). The LPG structures of the isolates from the Galilee (L863 and L810) were similar to each other, but differed in the LPG repeat units from the Judean Desert isolate (L747). The terminal sugar in the side chains of the repeat units of LPG purified from L863 and L810 was beta-galactose and was not capped with glucose, unlike L747 and a previously characterized L. tropica strain from Iraq (L36). Since L810 was isolated from P. arabicus and L747 from P. sergenti, variations in the structure of their LPGs may explain their capacity to infect different sand fly species.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Phlebotomus
/
Leishmania tropica
/
Glicoesfingolipídeos
/
Insetos Vetores
Limite:
Animals
/
Female
/
Humans
País como assunto:
Asia
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2004
Tipo de documento:
Article