| Literature DB >> 31625841 |
Sandra R Maruyama, Alynne K M de Santana, Nayore T Takamiya, Talita Y Takahashi, Luana A Rogerio, Caio A B Oliveira, Cristiane M Milanezi, Viviane A Trombela, Angela K Cruz, Amélia R Jesus, Aline S Barreto, Angela M da Silva, Roque P Almeida, José M Ribeiro, João S Silva.
Abstract
Through whole-genome sequencing analysis, we identified non-Leishmania parasites isolated from a man with a fatal visceral leishmaniasis-like illness in Brazil. The parasites infected mice and reproduced the patient's clinical manifestations. Molecular epidemiologic studies are needed to ascertain whether a new infectious disease is emerging that can be confused with leishmaniasis.Entities:
Keywords: Brazil; Crithidia-related; Visceral leishmaniasis–like; genome sequencing; parasites; sand flies; vector-borne infections; whole-genome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31625841 PMCID: PMC6810192 DOI: 10.3201/eid2511.181548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Non-Leishmania parasites isolated from 2 patients with visceral leishmaniasis–like illness used for whole-genome sequencing, Brazil*
| Clinical isolate | Year isolated | Tissue source | Patient age, y/sex | Treatment | Recidivism | Healing time | Serologic test (rK39) | MLEE | Experimental assays |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LVH60 | 2011 | BM | 64/M | Liposomal amphotericin B | Yes, 3 | Fatal case | Positive | Inconclusive | Mouse infection (this study) |
| LVH60a (DPSLs) | 2012 | SL | 65/M | Liposomal amphotericin B | Yes, 3 | Fatal case | Positive | Inconclusive | Mouse infection (this study) |
| HU-UFS14 | 2009 | BM | 15/M | Antimony, amphotericin B | NA | NA | Positive |
| NO- and antimony-resistant ( |
*BM, bone marrow; DPSL, disseminated popular skin lesions; MLEE, multilocus enzyme electrophoresis; NA, not available or not applicable; NO, nitrite oxide; SL, skin lesion.
Figure 1Phylogenomic analysis of genomewide orthologous coding sequences from LVH60 and LVH60a clinical isolates from a 64-year-old man with fatal visceral leishmaniasis–like illness, Brazil, and 33 Trypanosomatida species. Dendrogram shows the genetic relationships among all species investigated in the current study. Hierarchical clustering was performed with a set of ≈6,400 orthologous genes across 33 trypanosomatids, designated as the total orthologous median matrix. HU-UFS14 (black triangle; L. infantum laboratory reference strain) is placed in the same branch with L. infantum and L. donovani, whereas the LVH60 and LVH60a clinical isolates are placed in sister positions with Crithidia fasciculata. LVH60 was isolated from bone marrow (gray triangle), LVH60a from a skin lesion (gray circle) biopsy, both from the same patient. Numbers next to the branches represent the percentages of approximate unbiased support probabilities for 10,000 bootstraps, calculated using the pvclust R package (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/pvclust). Branch relationships were defined by their median amino acid evolutionary distance (Appendix).
Figure 2Experimental infection of BALB/c mice with LVH60 and LVH60a clinical isolates obtained from a 64-year-old man with fatal visceral leishmaniasis–like illness, Brazil. LVH60 was isolated from bone marrow, LVH60a from a skin lesion biopsy. Female BALB/c mice were infected intravenously with 107 stationary-phase promastigotes. After 4 weeks of infection, spleen and liver samples were collected. Parasite loads were determined by a limiting dilution assay of spleen and liver homogenates and are expressed as the mean ± SD. A) LVH60 strain infection in mice resulted in parasite detection in the spleen and liver; the LVH60a strain was not detected in the spleen. B) For cutaneous infection, BALB/c mice were injected subcutaneously in the right ear dermis with 106 stationary phase promastigotes. Infected ears were collected and imaged. C) Parasite burden in ears was assessed by a limiting dilution assay. D) Ear thickness was measured weekly with a digital caliper. The HU-UFS14 strain (L. infantum) was used as a positive control for experimental visceral leishmaniasis (A), whereas the LV29 strain (L. major) was used as a positive control for experimental cutaneous leishmaniasis. The results represent 3 independent experiments. Error bars indicate SD. ND, not detected. *p<0.05.