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The site of cutaneous infection influences the immunological response and clinical outcome of hamsters infected with Leishmania panamensis

Authors :
Bruno L. Travi
Peter C. Melby
Nora Guarín
Yaneth Osorio
Claude Pirmez
Bysani Chandrasekar
Source :
Parasite immunology. 25(3)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

SUMMARY We determined that the site of inoculation (foot or snout) influences the clinical evolution and immune responses of hamsters infected with Leishmania (Viannia) panamensis . Hamsters infected in the snout showed (i) a more rapid and severe lesion evolution at multiple time points ( P < 0·05), (ii) a more extensive inflammatory infiltrate and tissue necrosis, (iii) a higher tissue parasite burden, (iv) a higher antibody titre ( P < 0·01), but lower antigen-specific spleen cell proliferative response ( P = 0·02), and (v) a slower response to anti-leishmanial drug treatment ( P < 0·002). In both inoculation groups there was co-expression of type 1 (IFN- γ and IL-12) and some type 2 (IL-10 and TGF- β , but not IL-4) cytokines in the cutaneous lesions and spleen. Early in the course of infection, hamsters infected in the snout showed higher expression of splenic IL-10 ( P = 0·04) and intralesional IFN- γ ( P = 0·02) than foot infections. No expression of IL-12p40 or IL-4 was detected. During the chronic phase, snout lesions expressed more IFN- γ ( P = 0·001), IL-12p40 ( P = 0·01), IL-10 ( P = 0·009) and TGF- β ( P = 0·001), and the level of expression of each of these cytokines correlated with lesion size ( P ≤ 0·01). These results suggest that the site of infection influences the clinical outcome in experimental cutaneous leishmaniasis, and that the expression of macrophagedeactivating type 2 cytokines and/or an exaggerated type 1 proinflammatory cytokine response may contribute to lesion severity.

Details

ISSN :
01419838
Volume :
25
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Parasite immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8b6e47ff368f542c37b01acd5ab8f2bf