Volume 22, Issue 4 pp. 502-508
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Fusion of Host Cell Secondary Lysosomes with the Parasitophorous Vacuoles of Leishmania mexicana-inlected Macrophages

JAMES ALEXANDER

JAMES ALEXANDER

Department of Zoology, University of Glasgow, Scotland, U. K.

Gardiner Research Student of the Faculty of Medicine, Glasgow University.

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KEITH VICKERMAN

KEITH VICKERMAN

Department of Zoology, University of Glasgow, Scotland, U. K.

The technical assistance of Maureen McCallum in this project is gratefully acknowledged.

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First published: November 1975
Citations: 204

Abstract

SYNOPSIS. Secondary lysosomes of cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages were labeled with the electron-dense colloid saccharated iron oxide; the identity of the labeled structures was checked by the Gomori reaction for acid phosphatase. Amastigotes of Leishmania mexicana mexicana derived from mouse lesions were used to infect these macrophages in vitro. In electron micrographs of thin sections of infected macrophages the labeled secondary lysosomes were seen fused with the parasitophorous vacuoles without preventing subsequent multiplication of the parasites. A similar fusion probably occurs in vivo, and may provide a pathway through which not only nutrients but also drugs and host antibodies could reach the intracellular parasite.

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