Developing giant plasma membrane vesicles from textitLeishmania cells to investigate the role of membrane proteins in photodynamic inactivation

article
Autores

De Souza, Maressa D. F.

Ciancaglini, Pietro

Itri, Rosangela

Ribeiro, Martha S.

Data de Publicação

1 de março de 2026

Resumo

Abstract Interest in antimicrobial photodynamic therapy for treating cutaneous leishmaniasis has been rising, showing promising outcomes and good patient tolerance. In this study, we aimed to develop a protocol for producing giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs) from Leishmania amazonensis promastigote cell membranes, focusing on the role of membrane‐embedded proteins during methylene blue (MB) photooxidation with red light. Membrane extraction was achieved via centrifugation with various sucrose gradients. We then generated GPMVs by electroformation, applying different frequencies and voltages over four cycles, and examined them using phase contrast optical microscopy. For MB photooxidation, GPMVs were dispersed in an aqueous solution with 50 μM MB and exposed to 665 nm light at 830 μW. A comparable approach was used for mimetic membranes (giant unilamellar vesicles, GUVs) made of Leishmania membrane lipids. MB photoactivation in GUVs caused a transient increase in membrane area and full permeability. Conversely, GPMVs showed an earlier onset of contrast loss but exhibited less overall contrast reduction and no expansion, indicating that membrane proteins in GPMVs modulate the response to oxidative stress. Real‐time monitoring revealed morphological changes in L. amazonensis promastigote cells consistent with apoptosis following photodynamic inactivation.

Citação

BibTeX
@online{souza,_maressa_d._f.2026,
  author = {Souza, Maressa D. F., De and Pietro , Ciancaglini and
    Rosangela , Itri and Martha S. , Ribeiro},
  title = {Developing giant plasma membrane vesicles from
    textitLeishmania cells to investigate the role of membrane proteins
    in photodynamic inactivation},
  volume = {102},
  number = {2},
  date = {2026-03-01},
  doi = {10.1111/php.70000},
  langid = {pt-BR},
  abstract = {Abstract Interest in antimicrobial photodynamic therapy
    for treating cutaneous leishmaniasis has been rising, showing
    promising outcomes and good patient tolerance. In this study, we
    aimed to develop a protocol for producing giant plasma membrane
    vesicles (GPMVs) from Leishmania amazonensis promastigote cell
    membranes, focusing on the role of membrane‐embedded proteins during
    methylene blue (MB) photooxidation with red light. Membrane
    extraction was achieved via centrifugation with various sucrose
    gradients. We then generated GPMVs by electroformation, applying
    different frequencies and voltages over four cycles, and examined
    them using phase contrast optical microscopy. For MB photooxidation,
    GPMVs were dispersed in an aqueous solution with 50 μM MB and
    exposed to 665 nm light at 830 μW. A comparable approach was used
    for mimetic membranes (giant unilamellar vesicles, GUVs) made of
    Leishmania membrane lipids. MB photoactivation in GUVs caused a
    transient increase in membrane area and full permeability.
    Conversely, GPMVs showed an earlier onset of contrast loss but
    exhibited less overall contrast reduction and no expansion,
    indicating that membrane proteins in GPMVs modulate the response to
    oxidative stress. Real‐time monitoring revealed morphological
    changes in L. amazonensis promastigote cells consistent with
    apoptosis following photodynamic inactivation.}
}
Por favor, cite este trabalho como:
Souza, Maressa D. F., De, Ciancaglini Pietro, Itri Rosangela, and Ribeiro Martha S. 2026. “Developing giant plasma membrane vesicles from textitLeishmania cells to investigate the role of membrane proteins in photodynamic inactivation.” Photochemistry and Photobiology. March 1, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1111/php.70000.