| Literature DB >> 28487000 |
Jordanna Luíza DE Lima Celeste1, Ana Paula Venuto Moura1, João Carlos França-Silva1, Gabriela Matos DE Sousa1, Soraia Oliveira Silva1, Maria Norma Melo1, Wagner Luiz Tafuri2, Carolina Carvalho Souza2, Hélida Monteiro DE Andrade1.
Abstract
In South America, visceral leishmaniasis is frequently caused by Leishmania infantum and, at an unknown frequency, by Leishmania amazonensis. Therefore, mixed infections with these organisms are possible. Mixed infections might affect the clinical course, immune response, diagnosis, treatment and epidemiology of the disease. Here we describe the clinical course of mixed infections with L. amazonensis and L. infantum in a hamster model. We show that mixed infections are associated with more severe clinical disease than infection with L. amazonensis or L. infantum alone. In spleens with mixed infections, L. infantum outcompeted L. amazonensis in the tissue, but not in culture from tissue. We found increased levels of IgG in animals infected with L. infantum. Although more than 30 bands were revealed in a Western blot, the highest immunogenicity was observed with proteins having molecular masses of 95 and 90 kDa, whereas proteins with molecular masses of lower than 50 kDa were reactive frequently with serum from hamsters infected with L. amazonensis, and proteins with molecular masses of 80 and 70 kDa were reactive only with serum from hamsters infected with L. infantum. This finding has important implications regarding the biology of Leishmania and humoral immune responses to infections with these organisms.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Leishmania amazonensiszzm321990 ; zzm321990 Leishmania infantumzzm321990 ; clinical course; experimental infection; humoral immune response; mixed infection
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28487000 DOI: 10.1017/S0031182017000464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitology ISSN: 0031-1820 Impact factor: 3.234