To identify naturally infected Lutzomyia spp. by Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis, a PCR multiplex non-isotopic hybridisation assay was developed for the analysis of insect samples collected in distinct areas of the municipality of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), from March to December 2003. Data from experimental infection indicate that the method can detect one individual infected insect out of ten. Wild sand flies were classified and grouped into pools of 10 specimens each, reaching a total of 40 female groups. Positive results were obtained with pools of Lu. intermedia (5/32) and Lu. migonei (3/5) collected in two areas from the district of Jacarepaguá presenting recent cases of human and canine leishmaniasis. Considering eight infected groups (8/40) with at least one positive insect in each, it was possible to infer an infection rate of 2%. This technique permits the synchronous processing of a large number of samples, in order to investigate infection rates in sand fly populations and to identify potential insect vectors. The results presented here represent the first molecular approach used to infer the natural infection index in both Lutzomyia spp. and constitute essential data to the understanding of leishmaniasis ecoepidemiology in endemic areas from Rio de Janeiro.
Fourteen patients suffering from American cutaneous leishmaniasis were studied. Assays of the lymphocyte proliferative response induced in vitro by Leishmania braziliensis antigens were performed. After 5 days in culture, L. braziliensis-stimulated blast T cells were harvested for CD4+ and CD8+ phenotype analysis. When results before and at the end of therapy were compared, leishmaniasis patients showed an increase in the percentage of CD8+ blast T cells and a decline in the proportion of CD4+ blast T cells in cultures. The levels of gamma interferon in T-cell culture supernatants showed a tendency to increase when the patients were cured. These results show a pattern of higher proportions of Leishmania-reactive CD8+ T cells and lower proportions of Leishmania-reactive CD4+ T cells after cure. Human American cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is caused in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by the protozoan parasite Leishmania braziliensis, the only species of Leishmania that has been found parasitizing humans and dogs in the region (30). Transmission
Variable amounts of gammadelta lymphocytes were present in all lesions, with no association with duration of illness. The highest percentages of interleukin-2R- and interferon-gammaR-positive cells were observed in ML lesions and could render these T cells more susceptible to the effects of these cytokines. The distribution of intralesional T-lymphocyte subsets was quite variable (CD4+ > CD8+ = 18 cases, CD8+ > CD4+ = 12 cases and CD4+ congruent with CD8+ = 4 cases) without any association with clinical parameters, and could explain the controversy regarding proportions of these T-cell subsets in leishmaniasis lesions. Low percentages of Leishmania-reactive CD8+ T cells were observed in blood while an enrichment of CD8+ cells was shown in the inflammatory infiltrate, suggesting that local immunoregulatory factors could favour the recruitment and/or proliferation of local CD8+ lymphocytes. Increased percentages of CD8+ cells observed in older lesions are consistent with the hypothesis that they can mediate healing, although their involvement in tissue damage cannot be ruled out. It is possible that these mechanisms can influence the clinical outcome or even the response to therapy.
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