Article
Leishmania infantum-induced primary and challenge infections in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta): a primate model for visceral leishmaniasis.
Registro en:
PORROZZI, R. et al. Leishmania infantum-induced primary and challenge infections in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta): a primate model for visceral leishmaniasis. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, v. 100, p. 926-937, 2006.
0035-9203
10.1016/j.trstmh.2005.11.005
Autor
Porrozzi, Renato
Pereira, Miriam Sales
Teva, Antonio
Volpini, Angela Cristina
Pinto, Marcelo Alves
Marchevskyc, Renato Sergio
Barbosa Junior, Aryon de Almeida
Grimaldi Junior, Gabriel
Resumen
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) was experimentally induced in rhesus macaques (Macaca
mulatta) by intravenously inoculating 2×107 amastigotes/kg of body weight of Leishmania
infantum. The macaques developed a systemic disease showing characteristic features of human
VL such as fever, diarrhoea, body weight loss, anaemia, hypergammaglobulinaemia and transient
lymphocytosis, as well as lymph node, liver and/or spleen enlargement. Nine weeks after
infection, one primate showed pronounced weight loss, became moribund and was euthanized.
The necropsy findings included granulomas composed of parasite-containing macrophages, lymphocytes
and plasma cells in the liver, spleen and lymph nodes. The remaining macaques had
a sustained course of infection but developed a mild-to-moderate illness that subsequently
showed evidence of self-cure. Of note, pathological findings included a typical cell-mediated
immunity-induced granulomatous reaction that had an effect on the control of parasite replication.
All infected monkeys responded with increased production of anti-Leishmania-specific
IgG antibodies. Despite the fact that clinical resistance to L. infantum was not consistently
associated with a parasite-specific cell-mediated immune response, drug-cured macaques from
the primary infection acquired immunity to homologous re-infection. These findings point to
the feasibility of using the L. infantum macaque model for pre-clinical evaluation of novel
chemotherapeutics or vaccine candidates for human VL.