muramidase and Trypanosomiasis--African

muramidase has been researched along with Trypanosomiasis--African* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for muramidase and Trypanosomiasis--African

ArticleYear
The transcriptional signatures of Sodalis glossinidius in the Glossina palpalis gambiensis flies negative for Trypanosoma brucei gambiense contrast with those of this symbiont in tsetse flies positive for the parasite: possible involvement of a Sodalis-ho
    Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases, 2014, Volume: 24

    Tsetse flies, such as Glossina palpalis gambiensis, are blood-feeding insects that could be subverted as hosts of the parasite Trypanosoma brucei gambiense: initiated in the tsetse fly mid gut, the developmental program of this parasite further proceeds in the salivary glands. The flies act as vectors of this human-invasive parasite when their salivary glands sustain the generation of metacyclic trypomastigotes, the exclusive morphotypes pre-programmed to further develop in the human individuals. Briefly, once the metacyclic trypomastigotes have been deposited in the skin of humans from whom the parasite-hosting tsetse flies are taking their blood meals, the complex developmental program of this Trypanosoma brucei subspecies can result in a severe disease named sleeping sickness. Unveiling the processes that could prevent, in tsetse flies, the developmental program of T. b. gambiense could contribute reducing the prevalence of the disease. Using a global approach, we were curious to extract transcriptional signatures of Sodalis glossinidius, a symbiont hosted by three distinct groups of tsetse flies. To meet this objective, the transcriptome of S. glossinidius from susceptible and refractory tsetse flies was analyzed at 3, 10 and 20 days after flies blood feed on T. b. gambiense-hosting mice. Within this temporal window, 176 trypanosome responsive genes were shown to interact in well-defined patterns making it possible to distinguish flies susceptible to the parasite infection from refractory flies. Among the modulated transcripts in the symbiont population of flies refractory to trypanosome infection many were shown to cluster within the following networks: "lysozyme activity, bacteriolytic enzyme, bacterial cytolysis, cell wall macromolecule catabolic process". These novel data are further delineated in the following questions: could the activation of prophage hosted by S. glossinidius lead to the release of bacterial agonists that trigger the tsetse fly immune system along a profile that no more allows the parasite developmental program?

    Topics: Animals; Bacterial Proteins; Enterobacteriaceae; Muramidase; N-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine Amidase; Peptidoglycan; Prophages; Salivary Glands; Trypanosoma brucei gambiense; Trypanosomiasis, African; Tsetse Flies; Viral Proteins

2014
Alternative versus classical macrophage activation during experimental African trypanosomosis.
    Journal of leukocyte biology, 2001, Volume: 69, Issue:3

    The type I/type II cytokine balance may influence the development of different subsets of suppressive macrophages, i.e., classically activated macrophages (caMphi, type I) versus alternatively activated macrophages (aaMphi, type II). Recently, we showed that although mice infected with phospholipase C-deficient (PLC-/-) Trypanosoma brucei brucei exhibit a clear shift from type I to the type II cytokine production, wild type (WT)-infected mice remain locked in a type I cytokine response. In the present study, phenotype and accessory cell function of macrophages elicited during WT and PLC-/- T. b. brucei infection were compared. Results indicate that caMphi develop in a type I cytokine environment in the early phase of WT and PLC-/- trypanosome infection, correlating with inhibition of T cell activation triggered by a mitogen, a superantigen, or an antigen. In the late stage of infection, only PLC(-/-)-infected mice resisting the infection develop type II cytokine-associated aaMphi correlating with impaired antigen- but not mitogen- or superantigen-induced T cell activation.

    Topics: Animals; Antigen Presentation; Arginase; Ascitic Fluid; Concanavalin A; Enterotoxins; Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte; Female; Interferon-gamma; Interleukins; Lymphocyte Activation; Macrophage Activation; Macrophages, Peritoneal; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mitogens; Muramidase; Nitric Oxide; Phenotype; Superantigens; T-Lymphocytes; Trypanosoma brucei brucei; Trypanosomiasis, African; Type C Phospholipases

2001