The detection of
Leishmania tarentolae
in sympatric areas where
Leishmania infantum
is endemic raised questions regarding the protective effect exerted in dogs by
L. tarentolae
when in coinfection. This study aimed monitoring the in vitro gene expression of pro- (IFN- γ; TNF-α; IL-12) and anti-inflammatory (IL-4; IL-6; IL-10) cytokines in primary canine macrophages infected by
L. tarentolae
and
L. infantum
in single and in co-infections. Macrophages differentiated from dog blood mononuclear cells were infected with the
L. tarentolae
field-isolated (RI-325) and laboratory (LEM-124) strains, with
L. infantum
laboratory strain (IPT1), or both. Infection and the number of amastigotes per infected cell were evaluated microscopically by counting a total of 200 cells between 4 and 96 h. Cytokine gene expression was analyzed by real-time PCR from infected macrophages mRNA. Single infections presented higher expression of the cytokines IL-4 and IL-6, and lower of IL-12. Co-infections induced a lower gene expression of IL-4 and IL-6, and a higher gene expression of IL-12, correlating with the low amastigote burden despite the slight increase of infected cells. Data highlight the potential protective effect of
L. tarentolae
against
L. infantum
in co-infection by the reduced anti-inflammatory and increased pro-inflammatory cytokines gene expression, opening new perspectives for a canine vaccine development exploiting the non-pathogenic
L. tarentolae
.
Supplementary Information
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41598-024-78451-x.