| Literature DB >> 33983454 |
Hamed Memariani1,2, Mojtaba Memariani3,4.
Abstract
Protozoan diseases such as malaria, leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, and sleeping sickness still levy a heavy toll on human lives. Deplorably, only few classes of anti-protozoan drugs have thus far been developed. The problem is further compounded by their intrinsic toxicity, emergence of drug resistance, and the lack of licensed vaccines. Thus, there is a genuine exigency to develop novel anti-protozoan medications. Over the past years, melittin, the major constituent in the venom of European honeybee Apis mellifera, has gathered the attention of researchers due to its potential therapeutic applications. Insofar as we are aware, there has been no review pertinent to anti-protozoan properties of melittin. The present review outlines the current knowledge about anti-protozoan effects of melittin and its underlying mechanisms. The peptide has proven to be efficacious in killing different protozoan parasites such as Leishmania, Plasmodium, Toxoplasma, and Trypanosoma in vitro. Apart from direct membrane-disruptive activity, melittin is capable of destabilizing calcium homeostasis, reducing mitochondrial membrane potential, disorganizing kinetoplast DNA, instigating apoptotic cell death, and induction of autophagy in protozoan pathogens. Emerging evidence suggests that melittin is a promising candidate for future vaccine adjuvants. Transmission-blocking activity of melittin against vector-borne pathogens underscores its potential utility for both transgenic and paratransgenic manipulations. Nevertheless, future research should focus upon investigating anti-microbial activities of melittin, alone or in combination with the current anti-protozoan medications, against a far broader spectrum of protozoan parasites as well as pre-clinical testing of the peptide in animal models.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-protozoan effects; Leishmania; Melittin; Plasmodium; Trypanosoma
Year: 2021 PMID: 33983454 PMCID: PMC8119515 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-021-01229-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Anti-microbial effects of melittin against various protozoan parasites. Developmental forms of tested protozoa, methodologies, and key findings of the relevant studies have also been included
| Protozoan parasites | Identifier | Developmental forms | Methods | Key findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S-2 strain | Promastigotes | Evaluation of Ca2+ influx by fluorescence measurements | Dose-dependent induction of Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane Inhibition of melittin-induced Ca2+ influx by OBAA | Catisti et al. ( | |
| R9 strain | Promastigotes | Cell viability analysis using MTT assay | High killing activity against promastigotes (LD50: 0.3 μM) | Díaz-Achirica et al. ( | |
| Not mentioned | Autoclaved promastigotes | Measurements of sLA-induced cytokines in the collected whole blood samples from mice receiving melittin-adsorbed autoclaved | Significant reductions in the mean levels of IL-10 ( | Eltahir Saeed and Khalil ( | |
| MHOM/BR/1972/LD strain | Amastigotes and promastigotes | Cell viability analysis using MTT assay, quantification of cytokines, and determination of NO and H2O2 production | Direct inhibition of both amastigotes and promastigotes Indirect inhibition of intracellular amastigotes by immunomodulatory effects on macrophages (increasing IL-12 production and decreasing the levels of IL-10, TNF- α, NO, and H2O2) | Pereira et al. ( | |
| Not mentioned | Promastigotes | Cell viability analysis using microplate Alamar blue assay | Induction of death in 50% of promastigotes at 74.01 ± 1.27 μg/mL | Pérez-Cordero et al. ( | |
| Not mentioned | Promastigotes | Cell viability analysis using microplate Alamar blue assay | Ineffectiveness of melittin in killing 50% of promastigotes at > 100 μg/mL | Pérez-Cordero et al. ( | |
| ANKA strain | Ookinetes and gametocytes | Analysis of the effects of melittin on ookinetes (in vitro) and sporogonic stages ( | Complete obliteration of ookinetes after 30 min Significant reductions in both infection prevalence ( | Carter et al. ( | |
| NF54 strain | Gametocytes | Analysis of the effects of melittin and multi-melittin arrays on sporogonic stages of | Significant reductions of infection intensity ( | Habtewold et al. ( | |
| NF54 strain | Gametocytes | Analysis of the effects of melittin on sporogonic stages of | Significant decrements in both infection prevalence ( | Carter et al. ( | |
| RHβ strain | Extracellular tachyzoites | β-galactosidase release assay for the assessment of lytic activity | Induction of cytosolic β-galactosidase release and cell lysis | Seeber, ( | |
| M110 clone | Bloodstream forms | Evaluation of Ca2+ influx by fluorescence measurements | Dose-dependent induction of Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane | Ruben et al. ( | |
| AnTat1.1E clone | Procyclic forms | Evaluation of Ca2+ movement between organelles by luminescence measurements | Transient retention of Ca2+ in mitochondria Contribution of acidic compartments to Ca2+ homeostasis during the signaling process | Xiong et al. ( | |
| ILTar 1 procyclics | Trypomastigotes | Evaluation of Ca2+ influx by fluorescence measurements | Dose-dependent induction of Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane Inhibition of melittin effects on Ca2+ influx by OBAA, a PLA2 inhibitor Induction of Ca2+ release from intracellular stores in the absence of CaCl2 (and in the presence of 1 mM EGTA) | Catisti et al. ( | |
| Y strain | Amastigotes | Evaluation of Ca2+ influx by fluorescence measurements | Induction of Ca2+ influx Inhibition of melittin effects on Ca2+ influx by OBAA | Catisti et al. ( | |
| macrophagotropic Tehuantepec strain | Trypomastigotes | Light, fluorescence, and electron microscopies, evaluation of trypanocidal activity, and measurement of β-galactosidase release (before and after parasitic infection) | Inhibition of the parasite motility Disruption of plasma membrane Reduction of the parasite infectivity No reduction in the growth of intracellular parasites | Jacobs et al. ( | |
| M/HOM/AR/74/CA-I CL72 | Trypomastigotes | Determination of lethal concentration, evaluation of | High killing activity against Synergistic and additive anti-parasitic effects of melittin in combination with certain AMPs Inability of the parasite to recover after treatment with 10 μM of melittin | Fieck et al. ( | |
| CL Brener clone | Epimastigotes and trypomastigotes | Evaluation of the parasite viability, flow cytometry analysis, and TEM | Dose-dependent decrease in the number of Permeabilization of protozoan cell membrane (High percentages of PI-labeled epimastigotes and trypomastigotes) Induction of autophagy (epimastigotes) and apoptosis (trypomastigotes) | Adade et al. ( | |
| CL Brener clone | Amastigotes, epimastigotes, and trypomastigotes | Evaluation of the parasite viability, treatment during the | Induction of growth inhibition or killing of developmental forms of the parasite (< 2.5 μg/mL) Induction of structural changes (plasma membrane blebbing, mitochondrial swelling, and nuclear alterations) Induction of alterations in Disorganization of the kinetoplast DNA filaments Induction of alterations in flagellar structure Permeabilization of cell membrane Induction of apoptosis and autophagy | Adade et al. ( |
ΔΨm Mitochondrial membrane potential, AMP Anti-microbial peptide, EGTA Ethylene glycol-bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid, HO Hydrogen peroxide, IFN-γ Interferon-γ, IL-10 Interleukin-10, IL-12 Interleukin-12, LD Half lethal dose, MDC Monodansylcadaverine, MTT 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide, NO Nitric oxide, OBAA 3-(4-octadecyl)-benzoylacrylic acid; PI Propidium iodide, PLA Phospholipase A2, SEM Scanning electron microscopy; sLA: Soluble Leishmania donovani antigen, TEM Transmission electron microscopy, TNF-α Tumor necrosis factor-α, TUNEL Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TDT)-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end-labeling
Fig. 1Potential biomedical applications of melittin for future studies on protozoan diseases