Article
Leishmania Spp-Host Interaction: There Is Always an Onset, but Is There an End?
Registro en:
SILVA, Fatima Conceição; MORGADO, Fernanda N. Leishmania Spp-Host Interaction: There Is Always an Onset, but Is There an End?. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology, v. 9, Article 330, p. 1 - 14, Sept. 2019.
2235-2988
10.3389/fcimb.2019.00330
Autor
Silva, Fatima Conceição
Morgado, Fernanda N.
Resumen
For a long time Leishmaniasis had been considered as a neglected tropical disease.
Recently, it has become a priority in public health all over the world for different aspects
such as geographic spread, number of population living at risk of infection as well as
the potential lethality and/or the development of disfiguring lesions in the, respectively,
visceral and tegumentary forms of the disease. As a result, several groups have been
bending over this issue and many valuable data have been published. Nevertheless,
parasite-host interactions are still not fully known and, consequently, we do not entirely
understand the infection dynamics and parasite persistence. This knowledge may point
targets for modulation or blockage, being very useful in the development of measures
to interfere in the course of infection/ disease and to minimize the risks and morbidity.
In the present review we will discuss some aspects of the Leishmania spp—mammalian
host interaction in the onset of infection and after the clinical cure of the lesions. We will
also examine the information already available concerning the parasite strategy to evade
immune response mainly at the beginning of the infection, as well as during the parasite
persistence. This knowledge can improve the conditions of treatment, follow-up and
cure control of patients, minimizing the potential damages this protozoosis can cause to
infected individuals.