| Literature DB >> 34711872 |
Aurélie Schwing1,2,3, Didier F Pisani4, Christelle Pomares1,2, Alissa Majoor2, Sandra Lacas-Gervais5, Jennifer Jager2, Emmanuel Lemichez6, Pierre Marty1,2, Laurent Boyer2, Grégory Michel7.
Abstract
Leishmania infantum is the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis transmitted by the bite of female sand flies. According to the WHO, the estimated annual incidence of leishmaniasis is one million new cases, resulting in 30,000 deaths per year. The recommended drugs for treating leishmaniasis include Amphotericin B. But over the course of the years, several cases of relapses have been documented. These relapses cast doubt on the efficiency of actual treatments and raise the question of potential persistence sites. Indeed, Leishmania has the ability to persist in humans for long periods of time and even after successful treatment. Several potential persistence sites have already been identified and named as safe targets. As adipose tissue has been proposed as a sanctuary of persistence for several pathogens, we investigated whether Leishmania infantum could be found in this tissue. We demonstrated both in cell cultures and in vivo that Leishmania infantum was able to infect adipocytes. Altogether our results suggest adipocytes as a 'safe target' for Leishmania infantum parasites.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34711872 PMCID: PMC8553825 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-00443-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1L. infantum parasites are present in adipose tissue from BALB/c mice. Subcutaneous, periovarian, and brown adipose tissue (25 mg) from mice inoculated with L. infantum were collected after different periods of time (6 (A), 10 (B) and 31 weeks post infection (C)), DNA was extracted in a 100 µL volume and the presence of L. infantum DNA was determined by qPCR using a 2.5 µL DNA extract. Results represent parasite burden per milligram of tissue with SEM. *p < 0.05. qPCR negative samples are not shown on graphs.
Figure 2Immuno-labeled histological sections of tissues from BALB/c mice infected with Leishmania infantum, 40 weeks post infection. The presence of Leishmania infantum was determined in sections of different paraffin-embedded adipose tissue using rabbit anti-Leishmania polyclonal antibodies. Parasites were revealed using biotin-conjugated antibodies and peroxidase-labeled streptavidin. Labeled Leishmania infantum appear in orange/brown in adipocyte tissue (black arrows).
Figure 3(A) mRNA expression of Perilipin 1 and Adiponectin determined by RT-qPCR in the stroma vascular fraction (SVF) and the adipocyte fraction from scAdi, oAdi and bAdi of BALB/c mice in brown and white adipocytes (subcutaneous and periovarian) and stromal vascular fractions. Perilipin-1 and Adiponectin mRNA expression were used as a control for adipocyte purification. Histograms represent mean + sem of 4 mice. (B) Detection by qPCR of Leishmania infantum in adipose tissue fractions. DNA was extracted in a 100 µL volume and the presence of L. infantum DNA was determined by qPCR using a 2.5 µL DNA extract. *p < 0.05.
Figure 4Confocal microscopy of BALB/C adipocytes infected In vitro with GFP-L. infantum. Adipocytes of pre-adipocyte murine origin were infected after 7 days of differentiation with 10 GFP-Leishmania/cells. Red: phallloidin-Txred, Blue: Dapi, Green: GFP-leish. Images were acquired with Nikon Confocal A1R software (NIS-Elements Confocal) from Nikon (https://www.microscope.healthcare.nikon.com). Images were merged with ImageJ bundled with Java 1.8.0_172 (https://imagej.nih.gov/ij/). Images were assembled with Adobe Photoshop 2020 (https://www.adobe.com/).
Figure 5(A–C) Electron microscopy of in vitro infected brown adipocytes by GFP-L. infantum with different magnification (nucleus (n), flagella (f), kinetoplast (k), mitochondrion (m)).