Tritrichomonas foetus is a parasitic protist of the urogenital tract of cattle. It presents the trophozoite stage, a motile elongated form that constitutes most of the cells in a normal population, and a pseudocyst stage, an immotile rounded form that appears under unfavourable environmental conditions. In the present report pseudocysts were studied in natural conditions and after induction by chemicals or cycles of cooling and warming of cultures. The capacity of T. foetus to adhere to vaginal epithelial cells (VECs) was compared for both trophozoite and pseudocyst forms. By the use of video-enhanced-contrast microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and immunofluorescence microscopy techniques, we present evidence that: (1) T. foetus easily internalizes the flagella and forms pseudocysts under several unfavourable conditions; (2) T. foetus in both pseudocyst and trophozoite forms is able to adhere to VECs; (3) the adhesion rate is higher for pseudocysts than for trophozoites; (4) the adhesin Tf190 is expressed in both forms during interaction; (5) the adhesion process of pseudocysts seems to occur in a contact-dependent manner. Thus, we propose that the pseudocyst stage is not a degenerative form, but a functional life form that is able to interact with and firmly adhere to VECs.
In the present report we show the distribution of multiple tubulin isoforms in Trichomonas vaginalis and Tritrichomonas foetus, flagellated parasitic protists of the urogenital tracts of human and cattle, respectively, using immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. We used several monoclonal and polyclonal anti-tubulin antibodies from different sources and recognizing variant tubulin isoforms. Our results demonstrate that: (1) there is a heterogeneous distribution of the different tubulin isoforms in the main microtubular cell structures, such as axostyle, flagella, basal bodies, and mitotic spindle, (2) the axostylepelta junction is a structure with high affinity for glutamylated tubulin antibodies in T. foetus, (3) the spindle labeling is positive to anti-glutamylated tubulin and anti-αtubulin (TAT1 and purchased from Amersham) antibodies in T. vaginalis but it is negative in T. foetus, (4) the nuclear matrix and the cytosol presented positive reaction using glutamylated and TAT1 (anti-α-tubulin) antibodies only in T. vaginalis, and (5) the Golgi complex exhibited staining using the glutamylated tubulin antibody. The present data corroborate with the idea of the existence of a heterogeneous population of microtubules in these protists and of a subset of intracytoplasmic microtubules. Microtubule diversity may reflect distinct tubulins, diverse microtubuleassociated proteins, or a combination of both.
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