Effects of ketoconazole on sterol biosynthesis by Leishmania mexicana mexicana amastigotes in murine macrophage tumor cells
- PMID: 3736597
- DOI: 10.1016/0166-6851(86)90145-3
Effects of ketoconazole on sterol biosynthesis by Leishmania mexicana mexicana amastigotes in murine macrophage tumor cells
Abstract
Murine macrophage tumor cells infected with Leishmania mexicana mexicana were exposed to the antimycotic drug ketoconazole and to [2-14C]mevalonate, then the amastigotes were isolated, collected, purified, and their free sterols were analyzed by chromatographic and mass spectrometric methods. Control amastigotes contained as products of de novo biosynthesis C28 4-desmethyl sterols (episterol, 5-dehydroepisterol), C29 4-desmethyl sterols (stigmasta-7,24 (28)-dien-3 beta-ol, stigmasta-5,7,24(28)-trien-3 beta-ol), 4-methyl sterols (4 alpha, 14 alpha-dimethylzymosterol, obtusifoliol) and a 4,4-dimethyl sterol (lanosterol). Present also were macrophage sterols (cholesterol, desmosterol) and a putative product of the C-24 alkylation of desmosterol by amastigotes (24-methylenecholesterol). Amastigotes from macrophages exposed to ketoconazole showed notable changes in the proportions, concentrations and specific activities of their free sterols; increased for 4 alpha, 14 alpha-dimethylzymosterol and decreased for the endogenous C28 and C29 4-desmethyl sterols. Such changes were observed at a ketoconazole concentration as low as 0.01 microgram ml-1. By contrast, uninfected macrophages accumulated only small amounts of lanosterol of high specific activity at a ketoconazole concentration of 10 micrograms ml-1. the ketoconazole-induced alterations in amastigote sterols parallel those previously reported in fungi and L. m. mexicana promastigotes, and suggest a biochemical mechanism for the anti-leishmanial activity of the drug in which changes in sterol composition are linked to disturbances of cell membrane structure and function, and hence to cytotoxicity.
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