Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, September 2001, p. 1031-1035, Vol. 8, No. 5
1071-412X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.8.5.1031-1035.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Reactivity of MEST-1 (Antigalactofuranose) with
Trypanosoma cruzi Glycosylinositol Phosphorylceramides
(GIPCs): Immunolocalization of GIPCs in Acidic Vesicles of
Epimastigotes
Erika
Suzuki,1
Renato A.
Mortara,2
Helio K.
Takahashi,1 and
Anita
H.
Straus1,*
Departamento de
Bioquímica1 and Departamento de
Microbiologia, Imunologia e Parasitologia,2
Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Escola Paulista de Medicina,
São Paulo, SP 04023-900, Brazil
Received 23 April 2001/Accepted 11 July 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Using confocal microscopy, MEST-1-positive immunofluorescence was
observed within various Trypanosoma cruzi forms, except in
cell-derived trypomastigotes. Glycosylinositol phosphorylceramides were
identified by thin-layer chromatography immunostaining as the antigens
recognized by MEST-1 in these parasites. In epimastigotes, labeling of
MEST-1 coincided with acidic vesicles, indicating an internal
localization of these glycoconjugates.
 |
TEXT |
Glycoconjugates containing
galactofuranose (Gal-furanose) residues have been described in fungi,
bacteria, and trypanosomatides such as Trypanosoma cruzi and
Leishmania (4, 15-17). Although the biological
role of Gal-furanose residues is still unclear, the postulated absence
of Gal-furanose and galactofuranosidases in mammalian species suggests
the intriguing hypothesis that terminal Gal-furanose residues play a
central role in survival of fungi and parasites by preventing the
action of the host's glycosidases on their glycoconjugates. If this
hypothesis is correct, Gal-furanose residues are potentially useful as
specific target molecules for therapy of parasitic and fungal diseases.
We recently characterized the mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) MEST-1
(immunoglobulin G3 [IgG3]) (16), which recognizes
glycosylinositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs) containing terminal
residues of
-D-Gal-furanose, in either the linkage
1-6, present in the Pb-1 antigen of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis (6), or the linkage
1-3, present in
GIPL-1 of Leishmania major (8).
In the present study, we analyzed the reactivity of MEST-1 with
different forms of T. cruzi. In the infected host, the
intracellular dividing amastigotes give rise to trypomastigotes that
lyse the cell and spread the infection. Trypomastigotes may be ingested by the triatomine vector and differentiate into dividing epimastigotes and then metacyclic trypomastigotes, the forms that are infectious to
mammals. A lipopeptidophosphoglycan currently termed GIPC has been
described as the major glycoconjugate of the T. cruzi
epimastigote surface (3). It is a GIPC with a well-known
carbohydrate structure containing one or two terminal Gal-furanose
residues (5, 10). We analyzed the reactivity of MEST-1
with different forms of T. cruzi, and with GIPCs purified
from the parasites, by indirect immunofluorescence (IFI), solid-phase
radioimmunoassay (RIA), and high-performance thin-layer chromatography
(HPTLC) immunostaining.
Epimastigotes were grown in liver infusion tryptose medium with 10%
fetal calf serum at 27°C (2). Trypomastigotes and
extracellular amastigotes were isolated from culture supernatants after
4 to 5 days infection of Vero cells with metacyclic trypomastigotes (1). Amastigote preparation contained less than 10%
trypomastigotes, and trypomastigote preparation contained less than 5%
amastigotes. For IFI, formaldehyde-fixed parasites were incubated on
coverslips treated with 0.1% polylysine (19). The
adsorbed parasites were blocked with 5% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and incubated with MAb culture
supernatant and 1% BSA containing 0.01 mM 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
(DAPI) and anti-mouse IgG conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate. The
coverslips were examined on a Bio-Rad 1024-UV confocal microscope
(1). Controls performed using an irrelevant MAb (IgG3)
showed no fluorescence. Strong fluorescence was observed in
epimastigotes (Fig. 1B) and extracellular
amastigotes (Fig. 1F), and to a lesser extent in metacyclic
trypomastigotes (Fig. 1D) and intracellular amastigotes (Fig. 1J).
Epimastigotes showed strong labeling of vesicle-like components in the
posterior region of T. cruzi. In view of previous reports of
acidic vesicles, termed reservosomes, in the posterior region of
T. cruzi epimastigotes (9, 12), we analyzed the relationship between MEST-1 labeling and these vesicles. As a first
step, epimastigotes were incubated with Lysotracker Red, a specific
label of acidic vesicles in eukaryotic cells (Handbook of
Fluorscent Probes and Research Chemicals, Molecular Probes, Inc.,
Eugene, Oreg.), fixed with 1% formaldehyde, and incubated with MEST-1.
Colocalization of Lysotracker Red and MEST-1 was confirmed (Fig.
2).

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FIG. 1.
MEST-1 reactivity with various T. cruzi forms
by confocal IFI. (A and B) Epimastigotes; (C and D) metacyclic
trypomastigotes; (E and F) extracellular amastigotes; (G and H) Vero
cells infected with trypomastigotes; (I and J) Vero cells infected with
amastigotes. (A, C, E, G, and I) Differential interference contrast
(bars show the scale in micrometers); (B, D, F, H, and J) fluorescence.
Blue color, MEST-1 reactivity; red color, nucleus and kinetoplast
stained with DAPI.
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FIG. 2.
Colocalization of MEST-1 with acidic vesicles. Confocal
immunofluorescence microscopy images of T. cruzi
epimastigotes labeled with MEST-1 and Lysotracker Red are shown.
(A) Phase contrast (bar, 5 µm); (B) Lysotracker Red
fluorescence; (C) MEST-1 fluorescence; (D) overlaid image of DAPI
(blue), Lysotracker Red (red), and MEST-1 (green) fluorescence.
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In contrast to our results, a study by Golgher et al. (3)
using anti-GIPC serum showed a homogeneous label on the epimastigote surface, suggesting the predominant presence of GIPCs. We therefore characterized the T. cruzi antigen recognized by MEST-1 and
analyzed the glycolipid fractions. Epimastigotes, culture-derived
trypomastigotes, and extracellular amastigotes were added to 96-well
plates (precoated with 0.1% poly-L-lysine; 2 × 106 parasites in the first well), doubly diluted in
subsequent wells, and fixed for 15 min with 0.5% glutaraldehyde in
cold PBS. MEST-1 reactivity was analyzed by solid-phase RIA
(14). Fixed parasites were delipidated (or not) with a
mixture of isopropanol-hexane-water (IHW) (55:20:25 [vol/vol/vol],
upper phase discarded). Plates were then washed with PBS and used for
solid-phase RIA (13). MEST-1 showed high reactivity with
epimastigotes and extracellular amastigotes and weak reactivity with
cell-derived trypomastigotes (Fig. 3A),
similar to results from IFI. Delipidation of parasites abolished MEST-1
reactivity, and, as expected, most of the antigenicity was recovered in
the organic extract (Fig. 3B) when the extracts were adsorbed onto
96-well plates and MEST-1 binding was detected as described above.

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FIG. 3.
Reactivity of MAb MEST-1 with different T. cruzi forms. (A) Parasites (2 × 106) were
serially diluted and adsorbed onto 96-well plates. Plates were treated
with IHW (55:20:25, vol/vol/vol) ( , , and ) or left untreated
( , , and ) and incubated with MEST-1. (B) After treatment of
parasites with IHW, the solvent was transferred to another 96-well
plate and evaporated, and adsorbed glycolipid fractions were incubated
with MEST-1. and , epimastigotes; and , cell-derived
trypomastigotes; and , extracellular amastigotes.
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To confirm that MEST-1 recognizes all GIPC molecules and not only a
subpopulation present in acidic vesicles (which could explain the lack
of epimastigote surface labeling with MEST-1), GIPCs were extracted
from epimastigotes, extracellular amastigotes, and cell-derived
trypomastigotes by homogenizing the parasites (3 × 108) with 10 ml of isopropanol-hexane-water. The extracts
were evaporated and dialyzed, and carbohydrate content was determined
after densitometry of HPTLC stained with
orcinol-H2SO4 (17). The GIPC
fraction of epimastigotes contained 2 to 3 times more carbohydrate than that of amastigotes and 7.5 times more than that of trypomastigotes (data not shown). Aliquots containing about 3 µg of carbohydrate of
the various GIPC fractions were analyzed by HPTLC on silica gel 60 plates (Whatman, Inc., Clifton, N.J.), using as solvents chloroform-methanol-H2O at 60:40:8 and 25:21:7
(vol/vol/vol). Upon staining with orcinol-H2SO4
(Fig. 4A), at least five glycolipid components with migration expected for GIPCs were visualized for epimastigotes, and six components were visualized for cell-derived trypomastigotes and amastigotes. For HPTLC immunostaining, plates were
soaked in 0.5% polymethacrylate in hexane, dried, blocked for 2 h
with 1% BSA in PBS, incubated overnight with MAb MEST-1, and incubated
with rabbit anti-mouse IgG and 125I-labeled protein A
(2 × 107 cpm per 50 ml of BSA-PBS). GIPCs were
reactive with MEST-1 (Fig. 4B), indicating that even though GIPC levels
vary among different T. cruzi forms (epimastigotes > amastigotes > trypomastigotes), all GIPCs express terminal
Gal-furanose residues that are recognized by MEST-1. In order to better
understand the role of GIPCs in the T. cruzi life cycle, we
are currently investigating GIPC metabolic pathways. The relationship
between GIPCs and epimastigote reservosomes is still unclear. Soares
and DeSouza (11) showed by cytochemical studies that the
main components of the reservosome matrix are proteins and lipid
inclusions. The data presented here suggest that these inclusions
contain GIPCs, among other lipids.

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FIG. 4.
HPTLC of glycolipids from different forms of T. cruzi. (A) Staining with orcinol-H2SO4;
(B) immunostaining with MAb MEST-1. Lane S, ganglioside standard
mixture containing GM3, GM2, GM1, and GD1; lane 1, glycolipids from
epimastigote forms; lane 2, amastigotes; lane 3, cell-derived
trypomastigotes.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Stephen Anderson for editing of the manuscript.
This work was supported by FAPESP, CNPq, and PRONEX.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departamento de
Bioquímica, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Escola
Paulista de Medicina, Rua Botucatu 862, São Paulo, SP 04023-900, Brazil. Phone and fax: 55-11-5579-2509. E-mail:
straus.bioq{at}epm.br.
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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, September 2001, p. 1031-1035, Vol. 8, No. 5
1071-412X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.8.5.1031-1035.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.