1. Killing of trypanosomatid parasites by a modified bovine host defense peptide, BMAP-18
- Author
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Terry W. Pearson, Lee R. Haines, Brent E. Gowen, Angela M. Jackson, Brett A. Eyford, Robert E. W. Hancock, Jamie M. Thomas, Morteza Razavi, and Cristalle N. Watson
- Subjects
Insecta ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell Biology/Cell Growth and Division ,Cathelicidin ,Mice ,Parasitic Sensitivity Tests ,Biochemistry/Protein Chemistry ,0303 health sciences ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Sodalis glossinidius ,Flow Cytometry ,Trypanocidal Agents ,3. Good health ,Mitochondria ,Infectious Diseases ,Research Article ,Sodalis ,food.ingredient ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Cell Survival ,Antimicrobial peptides ,Trypanosoma brucei brucei ,Leishmania donovani ,Trypanosoma brucei ,Spodoptera ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,food ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Immunology/Immunity to Infections ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases/Antimicrobials and Drug Resistance ,030306 microbiology ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Proteins ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,biology.organism_classification ,Leishmania ,Virology ,Rats ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Trypanosoma ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,NIH 3T3 Cells ,Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Background Tropical diseases caused by parasites continue to cause socioeconomic devastation that reverberates worldwide. There is a growing need for new control measures for many of these diseases due to increasing drug resistance exhibited by the parasites and problems with drug toxicity. One new approach is to apply host defense peptides (HDP; formerly called antimicrobial peptides) to disease control, either to treat infected hosts, or to prevent disease transmission by interfering with parasites in their insect vectors. A potent anti-parasite effector is bovine myeloid antimicrobial peptide-27 (BMAP-27), a member of the cathelicidin family. Although BMAP-27 is a potent inhibitor of microbial growth, at higher concentrations it also exhibits cytotoxicity to mammalian cells. We tested the anti-parasite activity of BMAP-18, a truncated peptide that lacks the hydrophobic C-terminal sequence of the BMAP-27 parent molecule, an alteration that confers reduced toxicity to mammalian cells. Methodology/Principal Findings BMAP-18 showed strong growth inhibitory activity against several species and life cycle stages of African trypanosomes, fish trypanosomes and Leishmania parasites in vitro. When compared to native BMAP-27, the truncated BMAP-18 peptide showed reduced cytotoxicity on a wide variety of mammalian and insect cells and on Sodalis glossindius, a bacterial symbiont of the tsetse vector. The fluorescent stain rhodamine 123 was used in immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry experiments to show that BMAP-18 at low concentrations rapidly disrupted mitochondrial potential without obvious alteration of parasite plasma membranes, thus inducing death by apoptosis. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that higher concentrations of BMAP-18 induced membrane lesions in the parasites as early as 15 minutes after exposure, thus killing them by necrosis. In addition to direct killing of parasites, BMAP-18 was shown to inhibit LPS-induced secretion of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), a cytokine that is associated with inflammation and cachexia (wasting) in sleeping sickness patients. As a prelude to in vivo applications, high affinity antibodies to BMAP-18 were produced in rabbits and used in immuno-mass spectrometry assays to detect the intact peptide in human blood and plasma. Conclusions/Significance BMAP-18, a truncated form of the potent antimicrobial BMAP-27, showed low toxicity to mammalian cells, insect cells and the tsetse bacterial symbiont Sodalis glossinidius while retaining an ability to kill a variety of species and life cycle stages of pathogenic kinetoplastid parasites in vitro. BMAP-18 also inhibited secretion of TNF-α, an inflammatory cytokine that plays a role in the cachexia associated with African sleeping sickness. These findings support the idea that BMAP-18 should be explored as a candidate for therapy of economically important trypanosome-infected hosts, such as cattle, fish and humans, and for paratransgenic expression in Sodalis glossinidius, a bacterial symbiont in the tsetse vector, as a strategy for interference with trypanosome transmission., Author Summary Protozoan parasites cause serious diseases in large areas of the tropics. Control of these diseases depends to a great extent on the use of therapeutic drugs, many of which are highly toxic. In addition, parasite resistance to several of the front-line drugs is increasing. Host defense peptides (HDP; formerly called antimicrobial peptides) have recently received attention as potential anti-parasite effector molecules. We earlier reported that one such peptide, bovine myeloid antimicrobial peptide (BMAP-27), is a potent inhibitor of the growth of trypanosomes and Leishmania in vitro. Here we report our studies on BMAP-18, a truncated form of BMAP-27, which showed reduced toxicity to mammalian and insect cells and yet retained its direct toxicity to parasites in vitro. BMAP-18 also strongly inhibited LPS-induced release of tumour-necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) from human leukocytes, and thus has immunomodulatory activity. These findings suggest that BMAP-18 has potential as a therapeutic agent for treatment of infected animals or as an inhibitor of parasite transmission by their insect vectors. In anticipation of using BMAP-18 in vivo, we have also developed high affinity antibodies to BMAP-18 and have shown that these can be used, in conjunction with mass spectrometry, to detect the peptide in whole blood or plasma.
- Published
- 2008