Abstract
Infection of humans with the protozoan Leishmania donovani can be asymptomatic or it can cause fatal visceral leishmaniasis (VL), sometimes followed by the cutaneous complication PKDL. Parasites are spread through sand fly bites in endemic regions, and parasites in post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) skin lesions are a source of prolonged parasite transmission to sand flies, compromising disease eradication efforts. Since microRNAs can simultaneously modify the expression of multiple genes, we examined microRNAs in the blood that might be partial determinants of pathogenic responses leading to VL or PKDL. Our studies revealed several miRNAs expressed that are elevated in the plasma of patients with VL, which suppress some of the inflammatory responses that promote parasite killing. However, miRNA profiles were very similar between PKDL patients and controls, raising the possibility that major factors that lead to prolonged retention of parasites in the skin during PKDL are not systemic but are localized in the skin.
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CITATION STYLE
Roy, R., Hudachek, C. L., Bhushan Chauhan, S., Kumar, S., Kumar, A., Zhanbolat, B., … Wilson, M. E. (2025). The circulating plasma microRNA signature in human visceral leishmaniasis. MSphere, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00646-24
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