989 resultados para Leishmania (Leishmania) infantum
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Os flebótomos são insectos vectores de vários agentes patogénicos, dos quais se destacam os protozoários do Género Leishmania. Em Portugal, as leishmanioses, canina e humana, são causadas por L. infantum, sendo o cão o principal reservatório e Phlebotomus perniciosus e P. ariasi os vectores comprovados do parasita. São conhecidos três focos de doença, mas casos de leishmaniose canina têm sido reportados em outras regiões nas quais se desconhecem as espécies flebotomínicas presentes e respectivas taxas de infecção. Neste trabalho, efectuou-se a primeira prospecção flebotomínica no Concelho de Torres Novas, Distrito de Santarém, localizado na região Centro de Portugal. Os principais objectivos foram determinar a fauna flebotomínica do Concelho, os aspectos bioecológicos, as taxas de infecção por Leishmania e os factores de risco para a transmissão vectorial. De Junho a Novembro de 2010, 275 biótopos foram prospectados com armadilhas CDC. As capturas foram realizadas em 91 localidades, nas 17 freguesias do Concelho, e incluíram habitats domésticos, peridomésticos e silváticos. Os exemplares capturados foram identificados morfologicamente, as fêmeas utilizadas para detecção molecular de DNA de Leishmania e identificação das refeições sanguíneas. Análises de regressão simples e múltipla foram utilizadas para avaliação dos factores de risco para a presença das várias espécies flebotomínicas. Testes não paramétricos foram usados para comparar densidades. Dos 1262 flebótomos capturados, quatro espécies foram assinaladas com as seguintes abundâncias relativas: P. perniciosus 73,69%, P. ariasi 8,16%, P. sergenti 6,58% e Sergentomyia minuta 11,57%. Em 82% das localidades prospectadas foi detectada pelo menos uma espécie flebotomínica e em 71,4% destas foi capturada pelo menos uma das espécies comprovadamente vectoras de L. infantum. P. perniciosus foi assinalado em todas as 17 freguesias do Concelho. Os factores de risco identificados foram: temperaturas elevadas e humidades relativas baixas, locais abrigados e ausência de vento forte, presença de pinheiros como vegetação dominante, biótopos peridomésticos, particularmente currais de ovelhas e coelheiras, ou na proximidade de ovelhas, aves de capoeira e ninhos com andorinhas. A taxa de infecção flebotomínica por L. infantum foi de 4% para P. ariasi e de 0,32% para o total de fêmeas capturadas. A maioria das fêmeas para as quais se identificou a origem da refeição sanguínea pertencia a P. perniciosus. Esta espécie apresentou um comportamento oportunista, alimentando-se numa grande variedade de hospedeiros vertebrados. A elevada abundância e distribuição das espécies vectoras, juntamente com a seroprevalência de Leishmania nos cães do Distrito (5-10%), e a captura de uma fêmea grávida de P. ariasi (infectante), sugerem que o Concelho de Torres Novas é um foco de leishmaniose no país. A maior abundância relativa de P. sergenti, comparando com prospecções realizadas noutras áreas da região Centro de Portugal, sugere que este potencial vector esteja a expandir-se para latitudes mais elevadas, aumentando o risco de introdução de L. tropica no território, por contacto com imigrantes ou viajantes infectados de áreas endémicas. A monitorização flebotomínica, e dos hospedeiros vertebrados, deverá ser continuada no Concelho para que medidas eficazes de controlo possam ser definidas e implementadas.
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The kinetoplastid membrane protein 11 (KMP-11) has been recently described in Leishmania (Leishmania) donovani as a major component of the promastigote membrane. Two oligonucleotide primers were synthesized to PCR-amplify the entire coding region of New World Leishmania species. The Leishmania (Viannia) panamensis amplification product was cloned, sequenced and the putative amino acid sequence determined. A remarkably high degree of sequence homology was observed with the corresponding molecule of L. (L) donovani and L. (L) infantum (97% and 96%, respectively). Southern blot analysis showed that the KMP-11 locus is conformed by three copies of the gene. The L. (V) panamensis ORF was subsequently cloned in a high expression vector and the recombinant protein was induced and purified from Escherichia coli cultures. Immunoblot analysis showed that 80%, 77% and 100% sera from cutaneous, mucocutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis patients, respectively, recognized the recombinant KMP-11 protein. In a similar assay, 86% of asymptomatic Leishmania-infected individuals showed IgG antibodies against the rKMP-11. We propose that KMP-11 could be used as a serologic marker for infection and disease caused by Leishmania in America.
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The evolutionary relationships of sand flies and Leishmania are discussed in this report, which draws distinctions between co-association, co-evolution and co-speciation (or co-cladogenesis). Examples focus on Phlebotomus vectors of Le. infantum and Le. major in the Mediterranean subregion.
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The protective capabilities of three Leishmania recombinant proteins - histone 1 (H1) and hydrophilic acylated surface protein B1 (HASPB1) immunized singly, or together as a protein cocktail vaccine with Montanide, and the polyprotein MML immunized with MPL-SE adjuvant - were assessed in beagle dogs. Clinical examination of the dogs was carried out periodically under blinded conditions and the condition of the dogs defined as asymptomatic or symptomatic. At the end of the trial, we were able to confirm that following infection with L. infantum promastigotes, five out of eight dogs immunized with H1 Montanide, and four out of eight dogs immunized with either the combination of HASPB1 with Montanide or the combination of H1+HASPB1 with Montanidetrade mark, remained free of clinical signs, compared with two out of seven dogs immunized with the polyprotein MML and adjuvant MPL-SE, and two out of eight dogs in the control group. The results demonstrate that HASPB1 and H1 antigens in combination with Montanide were able to induce partial protection against canine leishmaniasis, even under extreme experimental challenge conditions.
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Os tripanossomatídeos são organismos caracterizados pelo controle póstranscricional da expressão gênica, principalmente em nível de tradução. Na tradução em eucariotos, tem grande destaque o complexo eIF4F, sendo um de seus principais componentes o fator de iniciação da tradução eIF4E. Já foram descritos em tripanossomatídeos seis homólogos para o eIF4E, nomeados EIF4E1 a 6. Em um estudo com Leishmania amazonensis, focado no EIF4E3, percebeu-se que seu perfil de expressão se alterava rapidamente numa curva de crescimento, com este apresentando ao menos duas bandas. As mudanças observadas sugeriam modificações pós-traducionais do tipo fosforilação, algo posteriormente confirmado. Analisando-se a sequência do EIF4E3 de Leishmania, foi possível identificar a presença de possíveis sítios de fosforilação e de ligação a parceiros funcionais como homólogos do eIF4G, outro componente do complexo eIF4F, e da proteína de ligação á cauda poli-A (PABP). No presente estudo foi analisado o perfil de expressão e a capacidade de ligação a parceiros funcionais do EIF4E3 de Leishmania superexpresso em células transfectadas e no qual foram introduzidas mutações em motivos específicos. Os resultados mostraram um perfil de expressão de ao menos três bandas para o EIF4E3 de L. amazonensis e duas para L. infantum, com o sítio S75, presente apenas na primeira, sendo o responsável por esta diferença. Em ensaios de imunoprecipitação, foi identificado um motivo que, quando mutado, aboliu a ligação do EIF4E3 com a PABP3, sugerindo este como o sítio de interação entre os fatores. Com a análise do efeito de mutações no EIF4E3 de L. amazonensis, foi percebido que ao se mutar três motivos implicados na à PABP e o possível sítio de ligação ao EIF4G, sua fosforilação diminuiu drasticamente, sugerindo a necessidade destas interações para que a fosforilação ocorra. Estes resultados indicam um complexo mecanismo de modificações pós-traducionais responsáveis pela regulação do EIF4E3 e contribuem a para a caracterização da sua função em Leishmania
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Pós-graduação em Ciência Animal - FMVA
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Pós-graduação em Ciência Animal - FMVA
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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In silico analyses of Leishmania spp. genome data are a powerful resource to improve the understanding of these pathogens' biology. Trypanosomatids such as Leishmania spp. have their protein-coding genes grouped in long polycistronic units of functionally unrelated genes. The control of gene expression happens by a variety of posttranscriptional mechanisms. The high degree of synteny among Leishmania species is accompanied by highly conserved coding sequences (CDS) and poorly conserved intercoding untranslated sequences. To identify the elements involved in the control of gene expression, we conducted an in silico investigation to find conserved intercoding sequences (CICS) in the genomes of L major, L infantum, and L braziliensis. We used a combination of computational tools, such as Linux-Shell, PERL and R languages, BLAST, MSPcrunch, SSAKE, and Pred-A-Term algorithms to construct a pipeline which was able to: (i) search for conservation in target-regions, (ii) eliminate CICS redundancy and mask repeat elements, (iii) predict the mRNA's extremities, (iv) analyze the distribution of orthologous genes within the generated LeishCICS-clusters, (v) assign GO terms to the LeishCICS-clusters. and (vi) provide statistical support for the gene-enrichment annotation. We associated the LeishCICS-cluster data, generated at the end of the pipeline, with the expression profile oft. donovani genes during promastigote-amastigote differentiation, as previously evaluated by others (GEO accession: GSE21936). A Pearson's correlation coefficient greater than 0.5 was observed for 730 LeishCICS-clusters containing from 2 to 17 genes. The designed computational pipeline is a useful tool and its application identified potential regulatory cis elements and putative regulons in Leishmania. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Parasitic diseases plague billions of people among the poorest, killing millions annually, and causing additional millions of disability-adjusted life years lost. Leishmaniases affect more than 12 million people, with over 350 million people at risk. There is an urgent need for efficacious and cheap vaccines and treatments against visceral leishmaniasis (VL), its most severe form. Several vaccination strategies have been proposed but to date no head-to-head comparison was undertaken to assess which is the best in a clinical model of the disease. We simultaneously assayed three vaccination strategies against VL in the hamster model, using KMPII, TRYP, LACK, and PAPLE22 vaccine candidate antigens. Four groups of hamsters were immunized using the following approaches: 1) raw extracts of baculovirus-infected Trichoplusia ni larvae expressing individually one of the four recombinant proteins (PROT); 2) naked pVAX1 plasmids carrying the four genes individually (DNA); 3) a heterologous prime-boost (HPB) strategy involving DNA followed by PROT (DNA-PROT); and 4) a Control including empty pVAX1 plasmid followed by raw extract of wild-type baculovirus-infected T. ni larvae. Hamsters were challenged with L. infantum promastigotes and maintained for 20 weeks. While PROT vaccine was not protective, DNA vaccination achieved protection in spleen. Only DNA-PROT vaccination induced significant NO production by macrophages, accompanied by a significant parasitological protection in spleen and blood. Thus, the DNA-PROT strategy elicits strong immune responses and high parasitological protection in the clinical model of VL, better than its corresponding naked DNA or protein versions. Furthermore, we show that naked DNA coupled with raw recombinant proteins produced in insect larvae biofactories -the cheapest way of producing DNA-PROT vaccines-is a practical and cost-effective way for potential "off the shelf" supplying vaccines at very low prices for the protection against leishmaniases, and possibly against other parasitic diseases affecting the poorest of the poor.
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Telomerase RNAs (TERs) are highly divergent between species, varying in size and sequence composition. Here, we identify a candidate for the telomerase RNA component of Leishmania genus, which includes species that cause leishmaniasis, a neglected tropical disease. Merging a thorough computational screening combined with RNA-seq evidence, we mapped a non-coding RNA gene localized in a syntenic locus on chromosome 25 of five Leishmania species that shares partial synteny with both Trypanosoma brucei TER locus and a putative TER candidate-containing locus of Crithidia fasciculata. Using target-driven molecular biology approaches, we detected a ∼2,100 nt transcript (LeishTER) that contains a 5' spliced leader (SL) cap, a putative 3' polyA tail and a predicted C/D box snoRNA domain. LeishTER is expressed at similar levels in the logarithmic and stationary growth phases of promastigote forms. A 5'SL capped LeishTER co-immunoprecipitated and co-localized with the telomerase protein component (TERT) in a cell cycle-dependent manner. Prediction of its secondary structure strongly suggests the existence of a bona fide single-stranded template sequence and a conserved C[U/C]GUCA motif-containing helix II, representing the template boundary element. This study paves the way for further investigations on the biogenesis of parasite TERT ribonucleoproteins (RNPs) and its role in parasite telomere biology.
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The parasitic protozoan Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis alternates between mammalian and insect hosts. In the insect host, the parasites proliferate as procyclic promastigotes andthen differentiate into metacyclic infective forms. The meta 1 gene is preferentially expressed during metacyclogenesis. Meta 1 expression profile determination along parasite growth curves revealed that the meta 1 mRNA level peaked at the early stationary phase then decreased to an intermediate level. No correlation was observed between meta 1 expression and infectivity. Conversely, infectivity correlated with the increase of apoptotic cells in the late stationary phase.
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Isolation of Leishmania parasite and species identification are important for confirmation and to help define the epidemiology of the leishmaniasis. Mice are often used to isolate pathogens, but the most common mouse strains are resistant to infection with parasites from the Leishmania (Viannia) subgenus. In this study we tested the inoculation of interferon gamma knockout (IFNγ KO) mice with biopsy macerates from Leishmania-infected patients to increase the possibility of isolating parasites. Biopsies from twenty five patients with clinical signs of leishmaniasis were taken and tested for the presence of parasites. Immunohistochemical assay (IHC) and conventional histopathology detected the parasite in 88% and 83% of the patients, respectively. Leishmania sp. were isolated in biopsy macerates from 52% of the patients by culture in Grace's insect medium, but 13% of isolates were lost due to contamination. Inoculation of macerates in IFNγ KO mice provides isolation of parasites in 31.8% of the biopsies. Most isolates belong to L. (Viannia) subgenus, as confirmed by PCR, except one that belongs to L. (Leishmania) subgenus. Our preliminary results support the use of IFNγ KO mice to improve the possibility to isolate New World Leishmania species.
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INTRODUCTION: The work was conducted to study phlebotomine fauna (Diptera: Psychodidae) and aspects of American cutaneous leishmaniasis transmission in a forested area where Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis occurs, situated in the municipality of Bela Vista, State of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. METHODS: The captures were conducted with modified Disney traps, using hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) as bait, from May 2004 to January 2006. RESULTS: Ten species of phlebotomine sandflies were captured: Brumptomyia avellari, Brumptomyia brumpti, Bichromomyia flaviscutellata, Evandromyia bourrouli, Evandromyia lenti, Lutzomyia longipalpis, Psathyromyia campograndensis, Psathyromyia punctigeniculata, Psathyromyia shannoni and Sciopemyia sordellii. The two predominant species were Ev bourrouli (57.3%) and Bi flaviscutellata (41.4%), present at all sampling sites. Two of the 36 hamsters used as bait presented natural infection with Leishmania. The parasite was identified as Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis. CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the results revealed the efficiency of Disney traps for capturing Bichromomyia flaviscutellata and the simultaneous presence of both vector and the Leishmania species transmitted by the same can be considered a predictive factor of the occurrence of leishmaniasis outbreaks for the human population that occupies the location.