Leishmania are a genus of sandfly-transmitted protozoan parasites that cause a spectrum of debilitating and often fatal diseases in humans throughout the tropics and subtropics. During the parasite life cycle, Leishmania survive and proliferate in highly hostile environments. Their survival strategies involve the formation of an elaborate and dense cell-surface glycocalyx composed of diverse stage-specific glycoconjugates that form a protective barrier. Phosphoglycans constitute the variable structural and functional domain of major cell-surface lipophosphoglycan and secreted proteophosphoglycans. In this paper, we discuss structural aspects of various phosphoglycans from Leishmania with the major emphasis on the chemical preparation of neoglycoconjugates (neoglycoproteins and neoglycolipids) based on Leishmania lipophosphoglycan structures as well as the immunological evaluation for some of them as potential anti-leishmaniasis vaccines.
KeywordsLeishmania; lipophosphoglycan; carbohydrates; neoglycoconjugates; glycoconjugate vaccines; chemical synthesis Leishmania are a genus of sandfly-transmitted protozoan parasites that cause a spectrum of debilitating and often fatal diseases in humans throughout the tropics and subtropics. The disease (termed leishmaniasis) torments over 12 million people worldwide, making 2.4 million people disabled and causing about 60,000 deaths annually. The WHO estimations show that 350 million people are thought to be at risk from the disease [1][2][3]. Although leishmaniasis is most common in tropical regions, it has also been diagnosed in overseas travelers and U.S. Gulf War veterans [4] and has emerged as an opportunistic infection of HIV patients [5]. The geographical distribution and pathology of leishmaniasis varies according to the species of the parasite. For instance, Leishmania donovani causes "visceral leishmaniasis" (also known as kala azar), characterized by an enlarged liver and spleen, that is often fatal, whereas L. major and L. tropica (in the Old World) and L. mexicana species