4.7 Review

Involvement of Leishmania Phosphatases in Parasite Biology and Pathogeny

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.633146

Keywords

Leishmania spp; phosphatases; phosphate metabolism; parasite virulence; parasite infection

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq) [401134/2014-8]
  2. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel superior (CAPES) [0012017]
  3. Fundacao Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) [e-26/201.300/2014, 202.378/2017]

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Leishmania parasites depend on various protein phosphatases to adapt, survive, and proliferate inside their hosts, including overcoming host immune responses. These phosphatases also play important roles in parasite virulence, drug resistance, and modulation of host immune responses. Through regulation of gene expression and enzymatic activity, phosphatases are crucial for the lifecycle and pathogenicity of Leishmania parasites.
In the Leishmania lifecycle, the motile promastigote form is transmitted from the sand fly vector to a mammalian host during a blood meal. Inside vertebrate host macrophages, the parasites can differentiate into the amastigote form and multiply, causing leishmaniasis, one of the most significant neglected tropical diseases. Leishmania parasites face different conditions throughout their development inside sand flies. Once in the mammalian host, the parasites have to overcome the microbicide repertoire of the cells of the immune system to successfully establish the infection. In this context, the expression of protein phosphatases is of particular interest. Several members of the serine/threonine-specific protein phosphatase (STP), protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP), and histidine acid phosphatase (HAcP) families have been described in different Leishmania species. Although their physiological roles have not been fully elucidated, many studies suggest they have an involvement with parasite biology and pathogeny. Phosphatases play a role in adaptation to nutrient starvation during parasite passage through the sand fly midgut. They are also important to parasite virulence, mainly due to the modulation of host cytokine production and impairment of the microbiocidal potential of macrophages. Furthermore, recent whole-genome expression analyses have shown that different phosphatases are upregulated in metacyclic promastigotes, the infective form of the mammalian host. Leishmania phosphatases are also upregulated in drug-resistant strains, probably due to the increase in drug efflux related to the activation of ABC transporters. Throughout this review, we will describe the physiological roles that have been attributed to Leishmania endogenous phosphatases, including their involvement in the adaptation, survival, and proliferation of the parasites inside their hosts.

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