Enhancement of experimental cutaneous leishmaniasis by Leishmania extract: Identification of a disease-associated antibody specificity Immunology

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Abstract

Background: Both Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania amazonensis induce cutaneous disease when injected in the skin of BALB/c mice. However, L. amazonensis may also visceralize in that strain of mice, infecting mainly the liver and spleen. In addition, whereas BALB/c mice die with a progressive cutaneous disease when infected by L. amazonensis, the infection by L. braziliensis is spontaneously cured. In a previous work, we have found that intravenous injections of L. amazonensis amastigote extract (LaE) potentiated a L. braziliensis infection in BALB/c mice, and that this infection-promoting activity could be inhibited by the addition of protease inhibitors to the extract. Methods: In order to detect markers of disease evolution, in the present work we analyzed the specificity of the anti-L. amazonensis antibody response of L. braziliensis-infected BALB/c mice injected intravenously with saline or LaE, supplemented or not with protease inhibitors, by the Western blot technique. Results: IgG1 antibodies recognizing an antigen with apparent molecular weight of 116 kDa were specifically detected in BALB/c mice that had been turned susceptible to L. braziliensis infection by injections of LaE. Conclusion: A Th2 immune response (IgG1 antibody-producing) against this 116 kDa antigen, therefore, could be associated with susceptibility to severe Leishmania infection.

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Silva, V. M. G., De-Araújo, C. F., Navarro, I. C., Oliveira, P. R. S., & Pontes-De-Carvalho, L. (2015). Enhancement of experimental cutaneous leishmaniasis by Leishmania extract: Identification of a disease-associated antibody specificity Immunology. BMC Research Notes, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-015-1158-0

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