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Changes in the Shape of Leishmania major Promastigotes in Response to Hexoses, Proline, and Hypo‐osmotic Stress

HOMAS N. DARLING*, JOSEPH BLUM

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Leishmania major promastigotes in late‐log phase are generally long and slender, and remain so during a 1 h incubation in buffer without exogenous substrate. When glucose, 2‐deoxyglucose, fructose, mannose, or proline are added, the cells become shorter and more rounded. The shape change in response to glucose is complete within 20 min and is reversible upon incubating the cells without substrate. Galactose, 3‐O‐methylglucose, 6‐deoxyglucose, sucrose, maltose, ribose, glycerol, alanine, glutamate or aspartate do not cause the shape change. Decreasing the osmolarity of the medium causes a rounding of the cells similar to that observed in the presence of glucose, and increasing the osmolarity inhibits the shape change in response to glucose. Inhibitors of glucose transport and 2nd messenger analogs do not affect the shape change.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)267-272
Number of pages6
JournalThe Journal of Protozoology
Volume37
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1990

Keywords

  • 2‐deoxyglucose
  • glucose
  • osmolarity

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