| Literature DB >> 35745464 |
Sahaana Arumugam1,2, Breanna M Scorza1,3, Christine Petersen1,2,3.
Abstract
Visceral leishmaniasis is a parasitic disease with significant dermal tropism. The skin is an important site of infection contributing to parasite transmission to naïve sand flies, but understanding how parasitism of host skin and the related immune microenvironment supports or prevents skin parasite replication is now the focus of major investigation in the field of leishmaniasis research. Here, we review dermatoimmunology during visceral leishmaniasis (VL), dermal Leishmania parasite burden, and the role of skin parasitism in transmissibility to sand fly vectors. First, we discuss the epidemiology of VL amongst dogs, the primary zoonotic reservoir for human infection. We explore the association between spatial distribution and the burden of parasites in the skin in driving outward transmission. Factors associated with parasite persistence in the skin are examined. We discuss systemic immunity during VL and what is known about immunological correlates in the skin microenvironment. Finally, we touch on factors egested into the skin during Leishmania inoculation by sand flies. Throughout, we discuss factors associated with the early and chronic establishment of Leishmania parasites in the skin and the role of the dermal immune response.Entities:
Keywords: dermal immune environment; infectiousness; parasite burden; transmissibility; visceral leishmaniasis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35745464 PMCID: PMC9228576 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11060610
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Outward parasite transmission to naïve sand flies in a model of chronic Parasitized macrophages cluster together in the skin in a self-propagating manner and heterogenous, patchy dermal distribution. Establishment of chronic infection in the skin is promoted by decreased CD4+ T cell effector responses, decreased IFNy secretion, increased PD-L1, hypergammaglobulinemia, and increased B-cell IL-10 secretion. When naïve sand flies feed, amastigote-parasitized macrophages are transmitted from the skin into the sand fly gut, infecting the sand fly. The bite site receives sand fly salivary proteins, sand fly gut microbiota, and an increase in erythrocyte heme-oxygenase-1 production, all of which contribute to an anti-inflammatory environment and subsequent parasite persistence. Created with BioRender.com, accessed on 10 March 2022.