Percoll density gradient centrifugation was used for isolating large quantities of bradyzoites of Sarcocystis suicanis, which were used for enzymatic analysis. Crude extracts of bradyzoites contained activities suggestive of several acid hydrolases. Levels of acid and alkaline phosphatase were higher than those of beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase and beta-galactosidase. Acid phosphatase was purified 156-fold with an overall recovery of 54% using DEAE-Sepharose 4B and Sephadex G-200 chromatography. The partially purified enzyme was not a glycoprotein and had a molecular weight of approximately 170,000. The enzyme was markedly inhibited by Cu++, Hg++, and iodoacetamide, suggesting the presence of a sulfhydryl group. Sodium tartrate caused strong inhibition of the enzyme. The acid phosphatase of S. suicanis appears to be a unique enzyme that cannot be classified under high or low molecular weight acid phosphatases of widely diverse origin.
Visceral leishmaniasis is a severe chronic disease of people and animals. The disease is caused by several subspecies of a protozoal organism, Leishmania donovani. If not treated, visceral leishmaniasis is often fatal. The most commonly used chemotherapeutic agents to treat the disease are pentavalent antimonials, which can be toxic, must be administered by parenteral routes, and are sometimes ineffective. In this study, meglumine antimoniate, a pentavalent antimony, was compared with WR 6026, an 8-aminoquinoline derivative, as to antileishmanial efficacy. The results indicate that either of these 2 drugs are effective in the suppression of amastigotes in the liver and spleen of the opossum. Despite the marked parasite suppression in the liver and spleen of the infected opossums, the experimental disease was fatal in all of the infected opossums, regardless of the therapy.
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