Increasing evidence suggests that the infectiousness of patients for the sand fly vector of visceral leishmaniasis is linked to parasites found in the skin. Using a murine model that supports extensive skin infection with Leishmania donovani, spatial analyses at macro-(quantitative PCR) and micro-(confocal microscopy) scales indicate that parasite distribution is markedly skewed. Mathematical models accounting for this heterogeneity demonstrate that while a patchy distribution reduces the expected number of sand flies acquiring parasites, it increases the infection load for sand flies feeding on a patch, increasing their potential for onward transmission. Models representing patchiness at both macro- and micro-scales provide the best fit with experimental sand fly feeding data, pointing to the importance of the skin parasite landscape as a predictor of host infectiousness. Our analysis highlights the skin as a critical site to consider when assessing treatment efficacy, transmission competence and the impact of visceral leishmaniasis elimination campaigns.
Atmospheric pressure plasmas have been ground-breaking for plasma science and
technologies, due to their significant application potential in many fields,
including medicinal, biological, and environmental applications. This is
predominantly due to their efficient production and delivery of chemically
reactive species under ambient conditions. One of the challenges in progressing
the field is comparing plasma sources and results across the community and the
literature. To address this a reference plasma source was established during the
‘biomedical applications of atmospheric pressure plasmas’ EU COST Action MP1101.
It is crucial that reference sources are reproducible. Here, we present the
reproducibility and variance across multiple sources through examining various
characteristics, including: absolute atomic oxygen densities, absolute ozone
densities, electrical characteristics, optical emission spectroscopy,
temperature measurements, and bactericidal activity. The measurements
demonstrate that the tested COST jets are mainly reproducible within the
intrinsic uncertainty of each measurement technique.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.