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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, August 1998, p. 1990-1995, Vol. 42, No. 8
Centro Internacional de Entrenamiento e
Investigaciones Médicas, Cali, Colombia AA
5390,2 and
Facultad de Salud,
Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia AA 5445,1
Received 2 October 1997/Returned for modification 18 December
1997/Accepted 4 May 1998
The emergence of Leishmania less sensitive to
pentavalent antimonial agents (SbVs), the report of inhibition of
purified topoisomerase I of Leishmania donovani by sodium
stibogluconate (Pentostam), and the uncertain mechanism of action of
antimonial drugs prompted an evaluation of SbVs in the stabilization of
cleavable complexes in promastigotes of Leishmania
(Viannia). The effect of camptothecin, an inhibitor of
topoisomerase, and additive-free meglumine antimoniate (Glucantime) on
the stabilization of cleavable DNA-protein complexes associated with
the inhibition of topoisomerase was assessed in the human promonocytic
cell line U-937, promastigotes of L. (Viannia) panamensis selected for SbV resistance in vitro, and the
corresponding wild-type strain. The stabilization of cleavable
complexes and the 50% effective dose (ED50) of SbVs for
parasites isolated from patients with relapses were also evaluated. The
median ED50 for the wild-type strain was 16.7 µg of
SbV/ml, while that of the line selected for resistance was 209.5 µg
of SbV/ml. Treatment with both meglumine antimoniate and sodium
stibogluconate (20 to 200 µg of SbV/ml) stabilized DNA-protein
complexes in the wild-type strain but not the resistant line. The
ED50s of the SbVs for Leishmania strains from
patients with relapses was comparable to those for the line selected
for in vitro resistance, and DNA-protein complexes were not stabilized
by exposure to meglumine antimoniate. Cleavable complexes were observed
in all Leishmania strains treated with camptothecin.
Camptothecin stabilized cleavable complexes in U-937 cells; SbVs did
not. The selective effect of the SbVs on the stabilization of
DNA-protein complexes in Leishmania and the loss of this
effect in naturally resistant or experimentally derived SbV-resistant Leishmania suggest that topoisomerase may be a target of
antimonial drugs.
0066-4804/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Sensitivity of Leishmania viannia panamensis to
Pentavalent Antimony Is Correlated with the Formation of
Cleavable DNA-Protein Complexes
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Avenida 1 Norte
No. 3-03 Cali, Colombia AA 5390. Phone: 572-668-2164. Fax:
572-667-2989. E-mail address:
cideim{at}cali.cetcol.net.co.
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