Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) remains a major public health problem worldwide. This disease is highly associated with chronic inflammation and a lack of the cellular immune responses against Leishmania. It is important to identify major factors driving the successful establishment of the Leishmania infection to develop better tools for the disease control. Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) is a key enzyme triggered by cellular stress, and its role in VL has not been investigated. In this study, we evaluated the role of HO-1 in the infection by Leishmania infantum chagasi, the causative agent of VL cases in Brazil. We found that L. chagasi infection or lipophosphoglycan isolated from promastigotes triggered HO-1 production by murine macrophages. Interestingly, cobalt protoporphyrin IX, an HO-1 inductor, increased the parasite burden in both mouse and human-derived macrophages. Upon L. chagasi infection, macrophages from Hmox1 knockout mice presented significantly lower parasite loads when compared with those from wild-type mice. Furthermore, upregulation of HO-1 by cobalt protoporphyrin IX diminished the production of TNF-α and reactive oxygen species by infected murine macrophages and increased Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase expression in human monocytes. Finally, patients with VL presented higher systemic concentrations of HO-1 than healthy individuals, and this increase of HO-1 was reduced after antileishmanial treatment, suggesting that HO-1 is associated with disease susceptibility. Our data argue that HO-1 has a critical role in the L. chagasi infection and is strongly associated with the inflammatory imbalance during VL. Manipulation of HO-1 pathways during VL could serve as an adjunctive therapeutic approach.
It has been reported that the level of protection provided by vaccines against murine visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is low and that progress in research on VL may be due to the lack of appropriate models to study protective immunity. We have analysed the immunohistological features occurring in BALB/c mice after intravenous administration of 10(3), 10(5) and 10(6) parasites of Leishmania infantum. Our results show that in all cases parasite administration leads to the establishment of infection and to the development of quantifiable immunohistological features which are dependent on the inoculum size. This study demonstrates that differences in the parasite challenge result in changes in the evolution of some of the parameters associated with the degree of the infection in the BALB/c model: level of anti-Leishmania antibodies, up-regulation of spleen arginase activity, balance between IFN-gamma and IL-10, extent of lymphoid follicle depletion in the splenic white pulp and ineffective development of hepatic granulomas. Also, and depending on the initial infectious inoculum, the absence of parasites in the bone marrow and the number of mature and empty type granulomas were parameters associated with protection. We think that in this model a challenge of the order of 10(5) parasites should prove useful for vaccine studies against VL.
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