Exposure of phosphatidylserine (PS) on cellular membranes and membrane-derived microvesicles stimulates a number of anti-inflammatory responses involved in malignant processes. Herein we show that B16F10 cells, a highly metastatic melanoma cell line, produce large quantities of PS-containing microvesicles in vitro. Tumor microvesicles increased TGF-beta(1) production by cultured macrophages and, in vivo, enhanced the metastatic potential of B16F10 cells in C57BL/6 mice, both effects being reversed by annexin V. Most strikingly, microvesicles induced melanoma metastasis in BALB/c mice, which are normally resistant to this tumor cell line. Altogether, this is the first demonstration that tumor-derived microvesicles favor the establishment of melanoma metastasis in a PS-dependent manner, possibly by down-regulating the host's inflammatory and/or anti-tumoral immune responses.
Signaling through exposed phosphatidylserine (PS) is fundamental for the TGFβ1-dependent, noninflammatory phagocytosis of apoptotic cells. This same mechanism operates in the internalization of amastigotes of Leishmania (L) amazonensis (L(L)a) in a process quoted as apoptotic mimicry. Now we show that the host modulates PS exposure by the amastigotes and, as a consequence, BALB/c mice-derived amastigotes expose significantly more PS than those derived from C57BL/6 mice. Due to this difference in the density of surface PS molecules, the former are significantly more infective than the latter, both in vivo, in F1 (BALB/c × C57BL/6) mice, and in vitro, in thioglycollate-derived macrophages from this same mouse strain. PS exposure increases with progression of the lesion and reaches its maximum value in amastigotes obtained at the time point when the lesion in C57BL/6 mice begins to decrease in size and the lesions in BALB/c mice are still growing in size. Synthesis of active TGFβ1, induction of IL-10 message, and inhibition of NO synthesis correlate with the amount of surface PS displayed by viable (propidium iodide-negative) infective amastigote. Furthermore, we also show that, similar to what happens with apoptotic cells, amastigotes of L(L)a are internalized by macropinocytosis. This mechanism of internalization is consistent with the large phagolysosomes characteristic of L(L)a infection. The intensity of macrophage macropinocytic activity is dependent on the amount of surface PS displayed by the infecting amastigote.
Programmed cell death by apoptosis of unnecessary or potentially harmful cells is clearly beneficial to multicellular organisms. Proper functioning of such a program demands that the removal of dying cells proceed without an inflammatory reaction. Phosphatidylserine (PS) is one of the ligands displayed by apoptotic cells that participates in their noninflammatory removal when recognized by neighboring phagocytes. PS ligation induces the release of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), an antiinflammatory cytokine that mediates the suppression of macrophage-mediated inflammation. In Hydra vulgaris, an organism that stands at the base of metazoan evolution, the selective advantage provided by apoptosis lies in the fact that Hydra can survive recycling apoptotic cells by phagocytosis. In unicellular organisms, it has been proposed that altruistic death benefits clonal populations of yeasts and trypanosomatids. Now we show that advantageous features of the apoptotic process can operate without death as the necessary outcome. Leishmania spp are able to evade the killing activity of phagocytes and establish themselves as obligate intracellular parasites. Amastigotes, responsible for disease propagation, similar to apoptotic cells, inhibit macrophage activity by exposing PS. Exposed PS participates in amastigote internalization. Recognition of this moiety by macrophages induces TGF-beta secretion and IL-10 synthesis, inhibits NO production, and increases susceptibility to intracellular leishmanial growth.
Apoptosis and/or programmed cell death have been described in examples ranging from fungi to man as gene-regulated processes with roles in cell and tissue physiopathology. These processes require the operation of an intercellular communicating network able to deliver alternative signals for cells with different fates and is thus considered a prerogative of multicellular organisms. Promastigotes from Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis, when shifted from their optimal in vitro growth temperature (22 degrees C) to the temperature of the mammalian host (37 degrees C), die by a calcium-modulated mechanism. More parasites die in the presence of this ion than in its absence, as detected by a colorimetric assay based on the activity of mitochondrial and cytoplasmic dehydrogenases which measures cell death, independently of the process by which it occurs. A heat shock, unable to induce detectable parasite death (34 degrees C for 1 h), is able to significantly raise the concentration of intracellular free calcium in these cells. Heat-shocked parasites present ultrastructural and molecular features characteristic of cells dying by apoptosis. Morphological changes, observed only in the presence of calcium, are mainly nuclear. Cytoplasmic organelles are preserved. Heat shock is also able to induce DNA cleavage into an oligonucleosomal ladder detected in agarose gels by ethidium bromide staining and autoradiography of [alpha 32P]ddATP-labeled fragments. These results indicate that death by apoptosis is not exclusive of multicellular organisms.
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