| Literature DB >> 21062457 |
Antonio Jiménez-Ruiz1, Juan Fernando Alzate, Ewan Thomas Macleod, Carsten Günter Kurt Lüder, Nicolas Fasel, Hilary Hurd.
Abstract
The execution of the apoptotic death program in metazoans is characterized by a sequence of morphological and biochemical changes that include cell shrinkage, presentation of phosphatidylserine at the cell surface, mitochondrial alterations, chromatin condensation, nuclear fragmentation, membrane blebbing and the formation of apoptotic bodies. Methodologies for measuring apoptosis are based on these markers. Except for membrane blebbing and formation of apoptotic bodies, all other events have been observed in most protozoan parasites undergoing cell death. However, while techniques exist to detect these markers, they are often optimised for metazoan cells and therefore may not pick up subtle differences between the events occurring in unicellular organisms and multi-cellular organisms.In this review we discuss the markers most frequently used to analyze cell death in protozoan parasites, paying special attention to changes in cell morphology, mitochondrial activity, chromatin structure and plasma membrane structure/permeability. Regarding classical regulators/executors of apoptosis, we have reviewed the present knowledge of caspase-like and nuclease activities.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21062457 PMCID: PMC2993696 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-3-104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Summary of the markers used to analyze apoptotic phenotypes in protozoan parasites upon different death stimuli. Plasmodium falciparum data refer to erythrocyte stages in culture.
| marker | Death stimulus | |
|---|---|---|
| PS exposure | novobiocin [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | stationary phase [ | |
| Cytochrome C release | novobiocin [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | stationary phase [ | |
| DNA degradation | stationary phase [ | |
| PS exposure | heat shock [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | edelfosine [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | edelfosine [ | |
| DNA degradation | edelfosine [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | serum deprivation/stationary phase [ | |
| DNA degradation | serum deprivation/stationary phase [ | |
| PS exposure | metacyclogenesis [ | |
| DNA degradation | nitric oxide (NO) [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | serum deprivation/stationary phase [ | |
| DNA degradation | serum deprivation/stationary phase [ | |
| Chromatin condensation | sodium nitroprusside (NO) [ | |
| DNA degradation | sodium nitroprusside (NO) [ | |
| Hypoploid nuclei | sodium nitroprusside (NO) [ | |
| PS exposure | intraperitoneal death in vivo in mice [ | |
| PS exposure | high density culture [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | prostaglandins [ | |
| Cytochrome C release | expression of proapoptotic Bax protein [ | |
| DNA degradation | high density culture [ | |
| PS exposure | ookinete stage in vitro [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | ookinete stage in vitro [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | ookinte stage in vitro and in vivo [ | |
| DNA degradation | ookinete stage in vitro [ | |
| chromatin condensation | ookinte stage in vitro and in vivo [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | chloroquine [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | chloroquine [ | |
| DNA degradation | cholorquine [ | |
| PS exposure | etoposide, doxorubicin [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | etoposide, doxorubicin [ | |
| DNA degradation | etoposide, doxorubicin [ | |
| PS exposure | cytotoxic monoclonal antibody [ | |
| ΔΨm changes | cytotoxic monoclonal antibody [ | |
| Caspase-like activity | cytotoxic monoclonal antibody [ | |
| DNA degradation | cytotoxic monoclonal antibody [ | |
| chromatin condensation | staurosporine [ | |
| Morphological changes | G418 [ | |
| chromatin condensation | G418 [ | |
| DNA degradation | G418 [ | |
| PS exposure | metronidazole, H2O2; [ | |
| DNA degradation | metronidazole, H2O2; [ | |
Figure 1Markers of apoptosis in . A. Elongated L. infantum promastigotes grown in vitro under control conditions. B. Rounded L. infantum promastigotes grown in vitro in the presence of edelfosine. C. Flow cytometric analysis showing a bi-parametric plot of the forward and side scatter properties of L. infantum promastigotes grown in vitro under control conditions. D. Flow cytometric analysis showing a bi-parametric plot of the forward and side scatter properties of L. infantum promastigotes grown in vitro in the presence of edelfosine. E. L. infantum promastigotes labelled with the potentiometric probe TMRM showing specific staining of the mitochondrion. F. Flow cytometric analysis showing a mono-parametric plot of the TMRM-derived fluorescence emitted by L. infantum promastigotes grown at 26°C, 38°C and in the presence of the mitochondrial uncoupler CCCP. G. Electron microscopic image of two L. infantum promastigotes grown at 38°C. n = nuclei.
Figure 2Markers of apoptosis detected in . A. A developing ookinete (retort) exhibiting phosphatidylserine translocation to the outer membrane surface, stained with Annexin V (taken from Arambage et al. [29]). B and C. Ookinetes following a JC-1 assay: the mitochondrial membrane potential is intact in B (orange coloured aggregates (m)) and has been lost in C. D and E. Ookinetes following incubation with the caspase substrate fam-VAD-FMK (CaspaTag), D = caspase +ve/PI -ve, E = caspase +ve/PI +ve. F. An ookinete stained positive for DNA fragmentation using the TUNEL assay (provided by L. Politt).
Comparison of assays for the effect of chloroquine (CQ) on ΔΨm in Plasmodium falciparum.
| Chloroquine concentration | Chloroquine incubation time | Probe | Affect on ΔΨm | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F32 (CQ sensitive) | 20 nM | 20 min | DiOC6(3) | No effect | Nyakeriga et al. [ |
| 3D7 (CQ sensitive) | 55 nM | 18 h | JC-1 | Sig. loss | Meslin et al. [ |
| 3D7 (CQ sensitive) | >3 μM | 4 h | JC-1 | Sig. loss | Ch'ng et al. [ |
All assays were performed in red blood cell stages. Higher doses and longer incubation times altered the effect of the drug on loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨm) and different strains of parasite reacted differently.