| Literature DB >> 31024534 |
Alti Dayakar1, Sambamurthy Chandrasekaran2, Suresh V Kuchipudi3, Suresh K Kalangi4.
Abstract
Leishmaniasis is a parasitic disease of humans, highly prevalent in parts of the tropics, subtropics, and southern Europe. The disease mainly occurs in three different clinical forms namely cutaneous, mucocutaneous, and visceral leishmaniasis (VL). The VL affects several internal organs and is the deadliest form of the disease. Epidemiology and clinical manifestations of VL are variable based on the vector, parasite (e.g., species, strains, and antigen diversity), host (e.g., genetic background, nutrition, diversity in antigen presentation and immunity) and the environment (e.g., temperature, humidity, and hygiene). Chemotherapy of VL is limited to a few drugs which is expensive and associated with profound toxicity, and could become ineffective due to the parasites developing resistance. Till date, there are no licensed vaccines for humans against leishmaniasis. Recently, immunotherapy has become an attractive strategy as it is cost-effective, causes limited side-effects and do not suffer from the downside of pathogens developing resistance. Among various immunotherapeutic approaches, cytokines (produced by helper T-lymphocytes) based immunotherapy has received great attention especially for drug refractive cases of human VL. Therefore, a comprehensive knowledge on the molecular interactions of immune cells or components and on cytokines interplay in the host defense or pathogenesis is important to determine appropriate immunotherapies for leishmaniasis. Here, we summarized the current understanding of a wide-spectrum of cytokines and their interaction with immune cells that determine the clinical outcome of leishmaniasis. We have also highlighted opportunities for the development of novel diagnostics and intervention therapies for VL.Entities:
Keywords: Leishmania; T-cells; cytokines; diagnosis; immunotherapy; visceral leishmaniasis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31024534 PMCID: PMC6459942 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1The interaction of innate and/or adaptive immune cells via cytokines during host defense or disease progression in VL.
Figure 2Cytokines balance in VL pathogenesis and host protection.
Cytokines involve in the host protection.
| IFN-γ | Activates MΦs and monocytes to release oxygen radicals and TNF-α, IL-l, and IL-6 secretion Blocks the production of IL-10 | ( |
| Absence leads to Th2 skewing | ( | |
| IL-12 | Drives Th1 response and IFN-γ production | ( |
| Controls Th2 expansion and IL-4 production | ( | |
| Induces NOS2 expression and NO production | ( | |
| Induces cell proliferation and lymphokines production | ( | |
| TNF-α | Activates the MΦs to kill amastigotes | ( |
| Induces NO production to kill the parasite or inhibit visceralization | ( | |
| Induces granuloma response and wound healing process | ( | |
| Shows IFN-γ-independent leishmanicidal activity | ( | |
| Promotes IL-10 producing T-cells for immune homeostasis | ( | |
| IL-2 | Activates T-cells and NK cells and induces IFN-γ production | ( |
| Induces the production of IL-4 | ( | |
| Endogenous IL-2 shows host protection | ( | |
| Exogenous IL-2 exerts anti-leishmanial action even in the absence of IFN-γ | ( | |
| IL-15 | Synergizes with IL-2 and IL-12 functions | ( |
| Induces T-cell proliferation and inhibits apoptosis, preserves memory T-cells, and induces B-cell maturation and isotype switching | ( | |
| Activates both Th1 and Th2 subtypes and shows pleiotropic role | ( | |
| Stimulates Th1 response, IL-12 production and downregulates IL-4+ Th2 cells | ( | |
| IL-22 | Promotes inflammatory response and is crucial in tissue repair | ( |
| Protects the liver from chronic infections | ( | |
| Induces the production of antimicrobial peptide-β-defensin | ( | |
| Complementary to Th1 cytokines and requires IL-6 for production | ( | |
| IL-7 | Induces proliferation of thymocytes, NK and mature T-cells, and production of cytotoxic T-cells | ( |
| Promotes the synthesis and secretion of IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1α, IL-1β, and MIP-113 by monocytes | ||
| With the combination of IFN-γ, it induces TNF-α and NO production to kill the amastigotes | ( | |
| IL-8 | Promotes the recruitment of neutrophils and granulocytes at lesion site | ( |
| Declines in the serum of active VL and polymorphism at −251 position associates with active VL | ( | |
| IL-23 | Shows IL-12 independent protection against visceral infection | ( |
| P19 pairs with IL-12p40 to become active and protects the host | ( |
Cytokines involve in the disease progression.
| IL-10 | Inhibits IFN-γ, IL-1, IL-6, IL-12, and TNF-α production and downregulates the innate and T-cell specific immunity | ( |
| Downregulates Th1 response, MΦ activation and DC's antigen presentation | ( | |
| Inhibits reactive nitrogen intermediates and IFN-γ production | ( | |
| Protects the tissues from inflammatory damage | ( | |
| Inhibits acute inflammation required for the parasite clearance | ( | |
| TGF-β | Inhibits T-cell proliferation, MΦ activation, iNOS expression, TNF-α and IFN-γ functions | ( |
| Shows marginal effect on the parasite load and IFN-γ dependent host resistance | ( | |
| Modulates immune response in favor of the parasites growth | ( | |
| Enhances arginase expression and polyamines synthesis | ( | |
| Shows the biphasic kinetics; promotes as well as inhibits the inflammation | ( | |
| Impairs the rate of disease cure in murine models | ( | |
| IL-5 | Higher production at lesion site and declines Th1 polarization | ( |
| Favors the parasite growth and dissemination | ( | |
| IL-6 | Induces differentiation of monocytes from DCs to MΦs | ( |
| Favors Th2 response and suppresses MΦ activation | ( | |
| Endogenous IL-6 shows host suppressive role in | ||
| Inhibits IFN-γ mediated gene expression | ( | |
| Absence of signaling induces Th1 response, tissue inflammation and parasite killing | ( | |
| Induces IL-27 and IL-10 production in | ( | |
| IL-9 | Regulates Th1-Th2 balance and expresses in | ( |
| Neutralization induces Th1 response and delays the disease progression | ( | |
| IL-27 | Mediates anti-inflammatory response by suppressing Th17 cells | ( |
| Induces T-bet expression and IL-10 secretion by autocrine action of IL-21 on CD4+ T-cells | ( | |
| IL-4 induced IL-6 and TGF-β inhibits IL-27 mediated Th1 response | ( | |
| IL-27 is not required for Th1 development and induces IL-10 in | ( | |
| Absence of signaling leads to Th1 response, tissue inflammation, and rapid parasite killing in | ( | |
| Elevates in human plasma and spleen during active VL | ( | |
| IL-33 | ST2-expressing T-cells accumulates in lesion site and polyclonal anti-ST2 antiserum reduces Th2 response and lesion growth | ( |
| IL-33 is abundant in serum and IL33+ cells in liver of VL patients | ( | |
| ST2−/− induces IFN-γ and IL-12 and controls the parasite load in liver | ||
| rIL-33 reduces Th1 immunity and infiltration of PMNs and monocytes in liver | ( |
Cytokines with dual role in leishmaniasis.
| IL-4 | Inhibits IFN-γ production and triggers alternative activation of MΦs and parasite survival | ( |
| Inhibits oxidative burst through reducing ROS and NO in MΦs | ( | |
| IL-4R expression is abundant in | ( | |
| Modulates antigen-uptake and endosomal processing, promotes humoral response in favor of disease | ( | |
| Induces IFN-γ secretion from CD8+ T cells in | ( | |
| Produces from PBMCs of cured VL patients in response to | ( | |
| IL-13 | IL-13 knock-out depletes granuloma response and IFN-γ secretion, and enhances IL-4 and IL-10 production in | ( |
| Protects from | ( | |
| IL-4 and IL-13 involves in pathogenesis of | ( | |
| Parasite species and the host genetic background influence the dual role of IL-13 | ( | |
| IL-17 | Induces TNF-α, IL-1, and chemokines production | ( |
| Affects neutrophils function, reduces apoptosis, induces the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and tissue damaging molecules at inflammatory foci | ( | |
| Induces GM-CSF, G-CSF, CXCL8, CXCL1, CXCL6, and CXCL10 | ( | |
| Induces IL-6 production and mediates pro-inflammatory and regulatory functions | ( | |
| Complementary to Th1 response and protects from | ( | |
| IL-18 | Drives Th1 and NK cell development and induces IFN-γ production | ( |
| Regulates the expansion of Th2 cells and stimulates TNF-α secretion by human PBMCs | ( | |
| In combination with IL-12, it activates memory cells and prevents reinfection of | ( | |
| Deficiency induces the susceptibility for | ( | |
| Induces IFN-γ independent protection from | ( | |
| IL-18−/− increases the resistance to | ( | |
| Regulates Th1 and Th2 balance | ( | |
| IL-1 | Induces inflammation and controls parasite dissemination | ( |
| IL-1β coordinates immune-to-brain communication | ||
| IL-1α inhibits disease progression in | ( | |
| Deficiency of IL-1 family genes delays the disease progression in | ( | |
| Low IL-1 induces the susceptibility for | ||
| Impaired production of IL-1 from human PBMCs with | ( | |
| rIL-1α induces granuloma response and IFN-γ production but not able to clear the parasite | ( | |
| IL-3 | With the combination of GM-CSF, M-CSF, and IFN-γ, it induces oxidative burst and TNF-α secretion and inhibits the parasite growth | ( |
| With M-CSF combination, it induces superoxide ions production and kills the parasites during acute VL | ||
| Provokes the infection in murine model of CL |
Cytokines used in diagnosis and chemo/immunotherapy of VL.
| Anti-IL-10R | Controls the experimental VL and induces antimonials activity in IL-10 knock-out or transgenic mice and IFN-γ production | ( |
| IL-10 | Neutralization increases IFN-γ and TNF-α production and reduces parasite burden in VL patients | ( |
| Abundant in antigen-stimulated PBMCs of | ||
| In asymptomatic individuals, IL-10 not directly correlates with Montenegro test positivity | ( | |
| Balanced IL-10 and IL-12 response induces chemotherapy efficacy | ( | |
| Disease relapse in human VL associates with IL-10 and IL-10+IFN-γ+ antigen-specific T-cells | ( | |
| Clinical symptoms strongly correlates with IL-6, IL-27, TNF-α, and IL-10 in | ( | |
| IL-4 | Upregulates in VL and associates with impaired treatment | ( |
| IFN-γ, IL-4, and IL-13 certainly upregulates in active VL and declines after cure | ( | |
| IFN-γ | Absence of antigen-specific lymphocyte proliferation and IFN-γ production indicates clinical disease | ( |
| Useful in assessing candidacy of vaccine antigens | ( | |
| Sbv with rIFN-γ had shown 82.3, 75, and 87% efficacy against VL patients from Brazil, Kenya, and India, respectively | ( | |
| IL-12 | Induces better response than anti-IL-10 alone or in combination with anti-IL-4 from PBMCs of VL patients | ( |
| VL cure restores the IFN-γ and IL-12 production | ( | |
| Useful as effective adjuvant for a killed vaccine against | ( | |
| rIL-12 mediates the cure of | ( | |
| Neutralization exacerbates | ( | |
| IL-15 | Liposomal amphotericin-B induces plasma IL-15 levels in VL | ( |
| IL-15 with combination of IFN-γ or IL-12 increases efficacy of antimonial therapy for VL | ( | |
| TNF-α | Anti-TNF-α therapy for arthritis increases susceptibility to VL | ( |
| In HIV co-infection, high levels of serum TNF-α and IFN-γ predicts the onset of acute VL | ( | |
| TGF-β & IL-13 | Antagonists of these clears the VL marginally and had no synergy with SbV | ( |