Pathological roles of mrp14 in anemia and splenomegaly during experimental visceral leishmaniasis

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Abstract

Myeloid-related protein 14 (MRP14) belongs to the S100 calcium-binding protein family and is expressed in neutrophils and inflammatory macrophages. Increase in the number of MRP14+ cells or serum level of MRP14 is associated with various diseases such as autoim-mune diseases and infectious diseases, suggesting the involvement of the molecule in path-ogenesis of those diseases. In this study, to examine the pathological involvement of MRP14 during cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis, wild-type (WT) and MRP14 knockout (MRP14KO) mice were infected with Leishmania major and L. donovani. Increase in the number of MRP14+ cells at the infection sites in wild-type mice was commonly found in the skin during L. major infection as well as the spleen and liver during L. donovani infection. In contrast, the influence of MRP14 to the pathology seemed different between the two infec-tions. MRP14 depletion exacerbated the lesion development and ulcer formation in L. major infection. On the other hand, the depletion improved anemia and splenomegaly but not hepatomegaly at 24 weeks of L. donovani infection. These results suggest that, distinct from its protective role in CL, MRP14 is involved in exacerbation of some symptoms during VL.

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Ishizuka, K., Fujii, W., Azuma, N., Mizobuchi, H., Morimoto, A., Sanjoba, C., … Goto, Y. (2020). Pathological roles of mrp14 in anemia and splenomegaly during experimental visceral leishmaniasis. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 14(1), 1–16. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008020

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