| Literature DB >> 31871953 |
Áurea Gabriel1, Ana Valério-Bolas1, Joana Palma-Marques1, Patrícia Mourata-Gonçalves1, Pedro Ruas1, Tatiana Dias-Guerreiro1, Gabriela Santos-Gomes1.
Abstract
This review is aimed at providing a comprehensive outline of the immune response displayed against cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), the more common zoonotic infection caused by protozoan parasites of the genus Leishmania. Although of polymorphic clinical presentation, classically CL is characterized by leishmaniotic lesions on the face and extremities of the patients, which can be ulcerative, and even after healing can lead to permanent injuries and disfigurement, affecting significantly their psychological, social, and economic well-being. According a report released by the World Health Organization, the disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost due to leishmaniasis are close to 2.4 million, annually there are 1.0-1.5 million new cases of CL, and a numerous population is at risk in the endemic areas. Despite its increasing worldwide incidence, it is one of the so-called neglected tropical diseases. Furthermore, this review provides an overview of the existing knowledge of the host innate and acquired immune response to cutaneous species of Leishmania. The use of animal models and of in vitro studies has improved the understanding of parasite-host interplay and the complexity of immune mechanisms involved. The importance of diagnosis accuracy associated with effective patient management in CL reduction is highlighted. However, the multiple factors involved in CL epizoology associated with the unavailability of vaccines or drugs to prevent infection make difficult to formulate an effective strategy for CL control.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31871953 PMCID: PMC6913332 DOI: 10.1155/2019/2603730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Old and New World species of Leishmania causing cutaneous leishmaniasis and their respective geographic distribution, vectors, hosts, and reservoir, adapted from [2, 5–7, 15].
| Species | Geographic distribution | Vectors | Transmission cycle | Hosts | Reservoirs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ethiopia |
| Zoonotic | Rodents, wild canids, dogs | Hyraxes |
|
| Asia & Africa |
| Zoonotic | Small rodents, dogs, humans | Small mammals and birds |
|
| Asia, Africa and Mediterranean |
| Predominant anthroponotic | Rodents, wild canids, dogs | Humans, hyraxes |
|
| South America |
| Zoonotic | Terrestrial forest rodents, marsupials, wild canids, humans | Rodents, edentates, marsupials, wild canids |
|
| Venezuelan Andes |
| Zoonotic | The opossum | Marsupials |
|
| USA (Texas), Central and South America |
| Zoonotic | Rodents: | Rodents, edentates, marsupials |
|
| Apparently limited to Venezuela |
| Zoonotic | Humans. Wild rodents, | Rodents |
|
| Venezuela, in the states of Lara and Yaracuy |
| Zoonotic | Cats and humans | Rodents: |
|
| Brazilian Amazon region |
| Zoonotic | Monkeys: | Monkeys, edentates, procyonids |
|
| Central & South America |
| Zoonotic | Rodents: | Humans. Terrestrial rodents and some marsupials |
|
| Colombia, Panama, Venezuela, forests of Brazil and Peruvian lowlands, others Latin American countries |
| Zoonotic | Sloth | Edentates |
|
| South America |
| Zoonotic | Rodents, edentates: | Rodents, edentates, marsupials |
|
| Forested areas of Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia |
| Zoonotic | Rodents | Rodents |
|
| Degraded forest in Belém, Pará, Brazil |
| Zoonotic | Humans | It is suspected that the wild animal reservoirs are probably terrestrial |
|
| States of Pará and Amazonas (Brazil), French Guyana |
| Zoonotic | Nine-banded armadillo | Edentates |
|
| Central America |
| Zoonotic | Rodents: | Rodents, edentates, marsupials, procyonids, monkeys |
|
| South America |
| Zoonotic | Humans and dogs. Rodents: | Rodents, marsupials |
Figure 1Worldwide distribution of cutaneous leishmaniasis, adapted from [1, 15, 18].
Clinical presentation and delayed-type hypersensibility (DTH) of cutaneous Leishmania species in the world, adapted from [2, 82, 90].
| Subgenus | Species | Main clinical presentation | DTH (skin test) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Localized | — |
|
| Localized | DTH + | |
|
| Localized | — | |
|
| Localized | DTH + | |
|
| Localized | DTH – | |
|
| |||
|
|
| Localized LC | DTH + |
|
| Localized | DTH + | |
|
| One or few lesions | — | |
|
| Single and multiple skin lesions | — | |
|
| Diffuse | — | |
|
| Single and multiple skin lesions | — | |
|
| Single and multiple skin lesions | — | |
|
| Single and multiple skin lesions | — | |
|
| Localized | — | |
|
| Localized | — | |
|
| Localized | — | |
|
| Localized | — | |
Figure 2Inoculation of Leishmania promastigotes in the host dermis by the sand fly triggers the activation of the complement cascade. C3 convertase undergoes proteolytic cleavage, giving origin to the complement factors C3a and C5a. These chemotactic factors attract neutrophils (N) and macrophages (MΦ) to the infection site and induce the expression of the respective receptors. On the parasite membrane, the surface glycoprotein of 63 kDa (gp63) can convert C3b to the inactive form (C3bi), which avoids the assembly of the lytic complex (MAC) on the parasite surface. In turn, C3bi binds to the MΦ receptor (RC3), promoting fast parasite phagocytosis.
Figure 3Differentiation of macrophage effector mechanisms against cutaneous species of Leishmania influences parasite fate and disease severity. IL: interleukin, IFN: interferon, MΦ: macrophages, NO: nitric oxide, PPAR: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor.
Figure 4Activation of host immunity by cutaneous species of Leishmania. After skin infection, Leishmania promastigotes are uptake by phagocytes. IL-12 is secreted by activated DCs, and parasite antigens are presented by APCs, resulting in lymphocyte activation and secretion of proinflammatory (IL-2, IFN-γ, and TNF-α) cytokines that can activate MΦ microbicide mechanisms, leading to parasite inactivation. When IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 predominate parasite replicates, allowing disease establishment. Differentiation of Th17 lymphocytes lead to a strong inflammatory environment that could cause tissue damage. Regulatory T cells inhibit lymphocyte activity promoting immune homeostasis and favoring disease progress. CL: cutaneous leishmaniasis; DC: dendritic cells, IFN: interferon; IL: interleukin; MΦ: macrophages; N: neutrophils; NO: nitric oxide; Th: T helper cell; Th0: naïve T cells; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; Treg: regulatory T cells.