Vaccination against murine cutaneous leishmaniasis by using Leishmania major antigen/liposomes. Optimization and assessment of the requirement for intravenous immunization |
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Authors: | L P Kahl C A Scott R Lelchuk G Gregoriadis F Y Liew |
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Institution: | Department of Experimental Immunobiology, Wellcome Research Laboratories, Beckenham, Kent, UK. |
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Abstract: | Efficacy of vaccination against cutaneous leishmaniasis in highly susceptible BALB/c mice was assessed comparatively by using radiation-attenuated promastigotes and colloidal Ag mixtures generated from a mixed Leishmania major (LV39) isolate (SLV39) and from a virulent cloned line (SVJ2) derived from the Jericho 2 L. major isolate. Dehydration-rehydration vesicle (DRV) liposomes were used as adjuvants. In optimization experiments phospholipid composition of DRV was varied, and the distearoyl derivative (DSPC) (liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature (Tc) 54 degrees C) of egg lecithin L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine was found to be superior to the dipalmitoyl derivative (DPPC, Tc 41.5 degrees C) and underivatized L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (Tc -10 degrees C). The criteria studied were in vivo priming for a secondary in vitro proliferative response and the prepatency of lesion onset after L. major challenge of mice immunized once i.v. A single s.c. immunization with SLV39 either free or entrapped within DSPC liposomes primed spleen cells to produce significant levels of IL-3 when stimulated with SLV39 in vitro. In contrast, the i.v. route of immunization with the same Ag preparations led to little or no IL-3 production by the spleen cells. Despite development of significant T cell activation, both SLV39 and SVJ2 administered s.c., either free or entrapped within liposomes, were not protective. However, i.v. immunization four times with SVJ2 entrapped within DSPC liposomes induced a level of resistance comparable with that of 2 x 10(7) gamma-irradiated promastigotes in the stringent BALB/c L. major model. Although significant, protection conferred after i.v. immunization with SLV39/DSPC liposomes was less effective. These data therefore show that DSPC/DRV liposomes, although a good adjuvant for inducing protective immunity to cutaneous leishmaniasis, are not able to overcome the requirement for an i.v. route of immunization with the leishmanial Ag preparation. Additionally, they demonstrate a correlation between IL-3 secretion and non-protection. They also suggest that SVJ2 represents a better source of protective Ag than SLV39. |
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