Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The management of (LD), responsible for fatal visceral leishmaniasis (VL), faces increasing challenges due to rising drug unresponsiveness, leading to increasing treatment failures. While hypolipidemia characterizes VL, LD, a cholesterol auxotroph, relies on host lipid scavenging for its intracellular survival. The aggressive pathology, in terms of increased organ parasite load, observed in hosts infected with antimony-unresponsive-LD (LD-R) as compared to their sensitive counterparts (LD-S), highlights LD-R's heightened reliance on host lipids. Here, we report that LD-R-infection in mice promotes fluid-phase endocytosis in the host macrophages, selectively accumulating neutral lipids while excluding oxidized-low-density lipoprotein (LDL). LD-R enhances the fusion of endocytosed LDL-vesicles with its phagolysosomal membrane and inhibits cholesterol mobilization from these vesicles by suppressing NPC-1. This provides LD-R amastigotes with excess lipids, supporting their rapid proliferation and membrane synthesis. This excess LDL-influx leads to an eventual accumulation of neutral lipid droplets around LD-R amastigotes, thereby increasing their unresponsiveness toward Amphotericin-B, a second-line amphiphilic antileishmanial. Notably, VL patients showing relapse with Amphotericin-B treatment exhibited significantly lower serum LDL and cholesterol than cured cases. Treatment with Aspirin, a lipid droplet blocker, reduced lipid droplets around LD-R amastigotes, restoring Amphotericin-B responsiveness.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12113272PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.102857DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ld-r amastigotes
12
amphotericin-b responsiveness
8
lipid droplets
8
droplets ld-r
8
ld-r
5
scrutinized lipid
4
lipid utilization
4
utilization disrupts
4
amphotericin-b
4
disrupts amphotericin-b
4

Similar Publications

The management of (LD), responsible for fatal visceral leishmaniasis (VL), faces increasing challenges due to rising drug unresponsiveness, leading to increasing treatment failures. While hypolipidemia characterizes VL, LD, a cholesterol auxotroph, relies on host lipid scavenging for its intracellular survival. The aggressive pathology, in terms of increased organ parasite load, observed in hosts infected with antimony-unresponsive-LD (LD-R) as compared to their sensitive counterparts (LD-S), highlights LD-R's heightened reliance on host lipids.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF