| Literature DB >> 32607709 |
Abstract
After almost 50 years of praziquantel (PZQ) research, Park and Marchant (Trends Parasitol 36:182-194, 2020) described the Ca++-permeable transient receptor potential (TRP) channel Sm.TRPMPZQ in Schistosoma mansoni as target of PZQ. Here we describe the deadly cascade in schistosomes which is induced by the (R)-PZQ enantiomer that includes contemporaneous stereoselective activation of Sm.TRPMPZQ-mediated Ca++ influx, disturbed Ca++ homeostasis, Ca++-dependent spastic paralysis, and Ca++- and PZQ-dependent disruption of parasitic teguments. Under normal conditions, there is a reversible balance between bilayer, isotropic, and HII phases in biological membranes (Jouhet 2013). In vitro, we could observe an irreversible but not stereoselective transition to the HII phase in liposomes consisting of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine (PS), two naturally occurring phospholipids in schistosomes, by the concerted action of Ca++ and PZQ (Harder 2013). HII structures are a prerequisite for induction of fusion processes (Jouhet 2013), which, indeed, become visible as blebs, vacuolation processes, and large balloon-like surface exudates in a large variety of PZQ-sensitive parasitic flukes and cestodes after PZQ treatment. These tegument damages are irreversible. As homologs of Sm.TRPMPZQ are also present in the other trematodes S. japonicum, S. haematobium, or Clonorchis sinensis and cestodes Taenia solium, Echinococcus multilocularis, or Hymenolepis microstoma (Park and Marchant, Trends Parasitol 36:182-194, 2020), it is suggested that a similar deadly cascade will be operating generally in PZQ-sensitive parasites.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium homeostasis; Contraction; HII structures; Praziquantel; Sm.TRPMPZQ; Tegument disruption; Worm death
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Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32607709 PMCID: PMC7366562 DOI: 10.1007/s00436-020-06763-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitol Res ISSN: 0932-0113 Impact factor: 2.289
Cascade of quick PZQ actions including Sm.TRPMPZQ activation, muscle contraction, and tegumental disruption in as a function of time. Data are taken from Andrews et al. (1983) and Park and Marchant (2020)
| Organ | Drug concentration | Observed effect | Time after drug exposure of observable effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| First step | |||
| Muscle Sm.TRPMPZQ | < 0.6 μM; EC50 about 150 nM | Activation of Ca++ permeable transient receptor potential channel in | Direct effect |
| Instantaneous effects following PZQ binding to Sm.TRP | |||
| A. Muscle contraction | |||
| Musculature | 0.2 μM | Increase in muscle tension | Seconds |
| Musculature | 1 μM | Half maximal contraction | After 11 s |
| Musculature | 0.32 μM | Tetanic contraction | Seconds |
| B. Tegumental disruption | |||
| Tegument | 0.32–0.6 μM | Surface blebbing | Seconds |
| Tegument | Around 1 μM | Increased Ca++ influx | Seconds |
| Tegument | 0.5 μM | Structural damage of the surface, bleb-like structures | Rapid, instantaneous |
| Tegument | Around 1 μM | Enhanced uptake of external Ca++ | Rapid, after 1 min |
| Tegument | Around 1 μM | Impaired ion fluxes (Na+, K+), uptake of glucose and adenosine, lactate excretion, glycogen breakdown, impaired activities of membrane associated enzymes: e.g., ATPase | Seconds until minutes |
| Tegument | 0.5 μM | Vacuolation, larger balloon-like exudates | 30 s |
Fig. 1Electron microscopic picture (unpublished) of tubules of the HII phase of a mixture of egg-yolk phosphatidylethanolamine, bovine brain phosphatidylserine, praziquantel, and Ca++ (molar ratios PE+PS/PZQ 2:1, PS/Ca++ 1:1). Magnification: 250.000-fold, 2.5 cm equals 0.1 μm). This transition is nearly complete showing inverted tubules with the fatty acid chains on the outside of the tubules and polar head groups in the center forming aqueous channels
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of the action of PZQ in S. mansoni, other trematodes, and cestodes. PZQ activates the transient receptor potential (TRP) channel Sm.TRPMPZQ in S. mansoni with an EC50 about 150 nM (Park and Marchant 2020). This results in a highly increased Ca++ influx, followed by perturbation of Ca++ homeostasis within worms (red). For PZQ-sensitive flukes and cestodes, the presence of Sm.TRPMPZQ homologs is postulated. Activation of this channel by PZQ accompanied by high Ca++ influx leads to increase in muscle tension ending with spastic paralysis and simultaneously formation of HII structures in the tegument membranes (blue). The latter is mediated by the simultaneous action of Ca++ and PZQ and is an irreversible process (Harder 2013). These then initiate fusion processes, formations of blebs, vacuolations, and large balloon-like surface exudates (blue). These processes are visible in all PZQ-sensitive flukes and cestodes Andrews 1985, Chai 2013). In tissue flukes, blood flukes, and cestodes, previously unexposed parasite antigens now become exposed and induce a cascade of immune reactions involving complement activation and attachment of immune cells (e.g., granulocytes) (black). In the case of schistosomes, morbid worms are fixed to walls of blood vessels by fibroblasts, and phagocytic cells invade parasites ending in lysis of their tissues, rapid disintegration of dead worms, and enclosure in granulomas in the liver (Mehlhorn et al. 1981). Also, intestinal cestodes and trematodes become quickly paralyzed and their tegument disrupted by PZQ before they are expelled from the intestine (Chai 2013). Here gut immune reactions and/or digestive enzymes may also play a role