| Literature DB >> 27600664 |
Abstract
The leishmaniases are a group of diseases caused by different species of the protozoan genus Leishmania and transmitted by sand fly vectors. They are a major public health problem in almost all continents. There is no effective control of leishmaniasis and its geographical distribution is expanding in many countries. Great effort has been made by many scientists to develop a vaccine against leishmaniasis, but, so far, there is still no effective vaccine against the disease. The only way to generate protective immunity against leishmaniasis in humans is leishmanization, consisting of the inoculation of live virulent Leishmania as a means to acquire long-lasting immunity against subsequent infections. At present, all that we know about human immune responses to Leishmania induced by immunization with killed parasite antigens came from studies with first generation candidate vaccines (killed promastigote extracts). In the few occasions that the T cell-mediated immune responses to Leishmania induced by infection and immunization with killed parasite antigens were compared, important differences were found both in humans and in animals. This review discusses these differences and their relevance to the development of a vaccine against leishmaniasis, the major problems involved in this task, the recent prospects for the selection of candidate antigens and the use of attenuated Leishmania as live vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: Antigens; Immunity; Immunization; Infection; Leishmaniasis; Vaccines
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27600664 PMCID: PMC5013623 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1777-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Differences in immune responses induced by live parasites vs killed parasite antigens in leishmaniasis
| Host species |
| Experimental design | Major differences found | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse (C57BL/6 or BALB/c) |
| Early responses in draining lymph node cells were assessed after inoculation of 5 × 106 live or killed | Cells from mice inoculated with killed parasites produced significantly more IL-4 and less IFN-γ than those from mice injected with live parasites | [ |
| Mouse (C57BL/6) |
| Mice with healed | Mice immunized with autoclaved | [ |
| Human |
| PBMC from subjects immunized with a killed vaccine composed of five | The majority of the responding cells of the vaccinated subjects were CD8+ T cells, in contrast to the results of a group of patients, whose | [ |
| Human |
| The expression of Vβ chains of TCR was assessed in cells from ACL patients and healthy volunteers before and after vaccination | Vaccination led to a broad expansion of the TCR Vβ repertoire both in CD4+ and in CD8+ T cells. On the other hand, the patients showed a significant decrease in the expression of certain TCRs both in CD4+ and in CD8+ T cells when compared to healthy controls from the same leishmaniasis endemic area | [ |
| Human |
| Cytokine responses of PBMC from ACL patients and subjects immunized with a vaccine composed of killed promastigotes to La and to the recombinant protein LACK, both from | The IFN-γ levels stimulated by La were significantly higher and the levels of IL-10 significantly lower than those stimulated by LACK in the patient group, whereas LACK induced a significantly higher IFN-γ production and a significantly lower IL-10 production compared with those induced by La in the vaccinated group LACK also induced a significantly higher frequency of IFN-γ-producing cells than did La in the vaccinated group | [ |
Abbreviations: ACL American cutaneous leishmaniasis, CpG ODN CpG oligodeoxynucleotides, IFN-γ Interferon- γ, IL-10 interleukin-10, La whole-cell promastigote antigen extract, LACK Leishmania homologue of receptors for activated C kinase, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cells, TCR T-cell receptors