PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jul 2020)

The macrophage microtubule network acts as a key cellular controller of the intracellular fate of Leishmania infantum.

  • Sandrine Cojean,
  • Valérie Nicolas,
  • Vanessa Lievin-Le Moal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008396
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. e0008396

Abstract

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The parasitophorous vacuoles (PVs) that insulate Leishmania spp. in host macrophages are vacuolar compartments wherein promastigote forms differentiate into amastigote that are the replicative form of the parasite and are also more resistant to host responses. We revisited the biogenesis of tight-fitting PVs that insulate L. infantum in promastigote-infected macrophage-like RAW 264.7 cells by time-dependent confocal laser multidimensional imaging analysis. Pharmacological disassembly of the cellular microtubule network and silencing of the dynein gene led to an impaired interaction of L. infantum-containing phagosomes with late endosomes and lysosomes, resulting in the tight-fitting parasite-containing phagosomes never transforming into mature PVs. Analysis of the shape of the L. infantum parasite within PVs, showed that factors that impair promastigote-amastigote differentiation can also result in PVs whose maturation is arrested. These findings highlight the importance of the MT-dependent interaction of L. infantum-containing phagosomes with the host macrophage endolysosomal pathway to secure the intracellular fate of the parasite.