Experimental pathogenicity of viscerotropic and dermotropic isolates of Leishmania infantum from immunocompromised and immunocompetent patients in a murine model |
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Authors: | Annie Sulahian ,Yves Jean Franç ois Garin,Francine Pratlong,Jean Pierre Dedet,Francis Derouin |
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Affiliation: | Laboratoire de Parasitologie-Mycologie, UniversitéParis VII, 15 rue de l'Ecole de Médecine, 75006 Paris, France;Laboratoire d'Ecologie Médicale et Pathologie Parasitaire, Facultéde Médecine, 163 rue Auguste Broussonet, 34000 Montpellier, France |
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Abstract: | The pathogenicity of 22 strains of Leishmania infantum from 11 HIV-infected and 11 immunocompetent patients with visceral (VL, n=16) or cutaneous (CL, n=6) leishmaniasis, belonging to 3 zymodemes (MON-1, n=14; MON-29, n=5; MON-33, n=3), was studied using a murine model. For each strain 16–20 BALB/c mice were infected at day 0 (d0) by i.v. injection of 107 stationary-phase promastigotes. Parasite burdens were quantified in the spleen and liver of 4–5 mice of each strain at d7, d20, d60 and d90 or d100, using a sensitive culture microtitration technique. A great variability of infection profiles between strains was observed: (i) six strains showed a progressive infection, with a predominance of hepatic parasites at d7 or d20 (104–106 g−1), then a continuous rise of splenic parasites reaching 105–107 g−1 at d90 or d100 contrasting with a stagnation or decrease in the liver; (ii) ten strains gave a controlled infection with hepatic parasite burden reaching 104–105 g−1 at d7 or d20, followed by a more or less rapid decline leading frequently to no detectable parasites; (iii) six strains resulted in other profiles, i.e., undetectable infection (n=1) or low parasite loads (n=4), or late occurrence of parasites in the spleen (n=1). No relationship was observed between profile and growth characteristics in vitro or zymodeme of the strain. Strains originating from CL never gave a visceralizing pattern in mice, but belonged more frequently to the avirulent type compared to VL strains. Strains from HIV-infected patients were not less virulent than those from immunocompetent individuals. These results showed that the course of L. infantum infection varies markedly with intrinsic parasite factors that display striking intraspecific variability. |
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Keywords: | Visceral leishmaniasis Leishmania infantum Experimental pathogenicity Immunocompromised patient |
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