4 results on '"T. Di Muccio"'
Search Results
2. Laboratory transmission of an Asian strain of Leishmania tropica by the bite of the southern European sand fly Phlebotomus perniciosus.
- Author
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Bongiorno G, Di Muccio T, Bianchi R, Gramiccia M, and Gradoni L
- Subjects
- Animals, Asia, Cricetinae, Europe, Female, Humans, Insect Vectors classification, Leishmania tropica genetics, Leishmania tropica growth & development, Leishmania tropica isolation & purification, Mesocricetus, Phlebotomus classification, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Refugees, Insect Vectors parasitology, Leishmania tropica physiology, Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous transmission, Phlebotomus parasitology
- Abstract
Imported cases of anthroponotic cutaneous leishmaniasis due to Leishmania tropica are increasingly documented in Europe. We investigated the ability of Phlebotomus perniciosus, a competent vector of Leishmania infantum widespread in southwestern Europe, to support the growth and transmissibility of an Asian strain of L. tropica recently isolated from a refugee. Parasite growth behavior was investigated in laboratory-reared sand flies fed artificially with promastigotes as well as in sand flies infected after biting on footpad lesions induced in hamsters by promastigote inoculation. The evolution of infection was checked by gut microscopy and quantitative real-time PCR, and it was found to be similar between promastigote- and amastigote-initiated infections. In 80% of infected sand flies, despite survival and flourishing growth of promastigotes after blood digestion and defecation, either the parasites died, or failed to migrate to the foregut and/or to mature into infective forms. However, in the remaining 20% L. tropica developed into abundant metacyclic promastigotes. The quantitative real-time PCR assay detected variable loads of gut promastigotes irrespective of morphological evidence of viability or progressive/final death. Parasite transmissibility was investigated by exposing naive hamsters to P. perniciosus previously infected on chronic lesions induced in hamsters which survived to take a second blood meal. Two months post exposure, lesions developed in skin sites bitten by sand flies confirmed to harbor metacyclic promastigotes; in the following months, the presence of viable and transmissible L. tropica parasites in lesions was demonstrated by xenodiagnosis assays. Our findings support the hypothesis that, in particular epidemiological situations, P. perniciosus may play the role of an occasional L. tropica vector., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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3. Failure of a multi-subunit recombinant leishmanial vaccine (MML) to protect dogs from Leishmania infantum infection and to prevent disease progression in infected animals.
- Author
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Gradoni L, Foglia Manzillo V, Pagano A, Piantedosi D, De Luna R, Gramiccia M, Scalone A, Di Muccio T, and Oliva G
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, Protozoan chemistry, Antigens, Protozoan immunology, Cell Proliferation, DNA, Complementary genetics, Disease Progression, Disease Reservoirs, Dog Diseases immunology, Dogs, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Immunization, Secondary, Immunoglobulin G analysis, Immunoglobulin G biosynthesis, Italy, Leishmaniasis, Visceral veterinary, Lymphocytes immunology, Psychodidae, Recombinant Proteins immunology, Ticks, Vaccination, Dog Diseases pathology, Dog Diseases prevention & control, Leishmania infantum immunology, Leishmaniasis, Visceral pathology, Leishmaniasis, Visceral prevention & control, Protozoan Vaccines immunology
- Abstract
We report results of a Phase III trial of the multi-subunit recombinant Leishmania polyprotein MML for the protection of dogs against infection by Leishmania infantum. The antigen, also known as Leish-111f, is the first antileishmanial human vaccine entered Phase I clinical testing. The study was performed in a leishmaniasis endemic area of southern Italy. Three groups of 15 Leishmania-free beagle dogs each, received 3 monthly injections with vaccines A (MML+MPL-SE adjuvant), B (sterile saline = control) and C (MML+Adjuprime adjuvant), respectively, before transmission season 2002. The surviving dogs received a second three-dose vaccine course 1 year later. The dogs were naturally exposed to sandfly bites for 2.5 months in 2002, and for 5 months in 2003. Every 2 months post vaccination, dogs were examined by clinical and immunological evaluation, and by specific serology, microscopy, culture and PCR. A weak lymphoproliferative response to MML was seen in A and C groups throughout the study period. One year after the first vaccine course, the cumulative incidence of leishmanial infections was 40% in group A, 43% in group B and 36% in group C. Two-year post-vaccination (1 year after the second vaccine course) the cumulative incidence was 87% in group A (with three symptomatic cases), 100% in group B (with no symptomatic cases) and 100% in group C (with two symptomatic cases). The efficacy of the MML vaccine as an immunotherapeutic agent for the prevention of disease progression (subpatent infection-->asymptomatic patent infection-->symptomatic patent infection) was evaluated through follow-up of dogs found infected prior to the second vaccination. Among 15 infected animals, progression to a subsequent stage of infection was found in 5/6 dogs of group A, 3/6 of group B and 2/3 of group C. We conclude that vaccination with MML is not effective to prevent leishmaniasis infection and disease progression in dogs under field conditions.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Phylogenetic analysis of Phlebotomus species belonging to the subgenus Larroussius (Diptera, psychodidae) by ITS2 rDNA sequences.
- Author
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Di Muccio T, Marinucci M, Frusteri L, Maroli M, Pesson B, and Gramiccia M
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Species Specificity, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, Phlebotomus classification, Phlebotomus genetics
- Abstract
In the genealogy of Phlebotomus (Diptera: Psychodidae), morphological analyses have indicated that the subgenus Larroussius is a monophyletic group which is most closely related to the subgenera Transphlebotomus and Adlerius. We conducted a phylogenetic analysis of the relationships among six representative species of the subgenus Larroussius and one species representatitive of the Phlebotomus subgenus, assessing sequences of the Second Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS2) of the ribosomal RNA (rRNA). Three of the species (P. perniciosus, P. ariasi and P. perfiliewi perfiliewi) were collected in different parts of the Mediterranean area. The trees estimated from parsimony and neighbour-joining analyses supported the monophyly of the Larroussius subgenus inferred from the morphological analysis. According to our data, P. ariasi may be a sister group to the rest of the Larroussius subgenus, although additional sequence data are needed to confirm this observation. Our results suggest that P. perniciosus and P. longicuspis are distinct species, in spite of the fact that there are only slight morphological differences. The strict congruence between the phylogeny of the Larroussius subgenus inferred from the ITS2 sequences and that based on morphological studies further confirmed the ability of the spacer sequence to identify recently-derived affiliations.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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