Article
IL-22 Protects against Tissue Damage during Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
Registro en:
GIMBLET, C. et al. IL-22 Protects against Tissue Damage during Cutaneous Leishmaniasis. Plos One, v. 10, n. 8, p. e0134698, 2015.
1932-6203
10.1371/journal.pone.0134698
Autor
Gimblet, Ciara
Loesche, Michael A
Carvalho, Lucas Pedreira de
Carvalho Filho, Edgar Marcelino
Grice, Elizabeth A
Artis, David
Scott, Phillip
Resumen
Carvalho, Lucas Pedreira de; Carvalho Filho, Edgar Marcelino de “Documento produzido em parceria ou por autor vinculado à Fiocruz, mas não consta à informação no documento”. National Institutes of Health, RO1AI106842 (PS), AR060873 (EAG), Tropical Medicine Research Centers AI30639 (EMC), and T32AI753216 (CG) Cutaneous leishmaniasis is a disease characterized by ulcerating skin lesions, the resolution of which requires an effective, but regulated, immune response that limits parasite growth without causing permanent tissue damage. While mechanisms that control the parasites have been well studied, the factors regulating immunopathologic responses are less well understood. IL-22, a member of the IL-10 family of cytokines, can contribute to wound healing, but in other instances promotes pathology. Here we investigated the role of IL-22 during leishmania infection, and found that IL-22 limits leishmania-induced pathology when a certain threshold of damage is induced by a high dose of parasites. Il22-/- mice developed more severe disease than wild-type mice, with significantly more pathology at the site of infection, and in some cases permanent loss of tissue. The increased inflammation was not due to an increased parasite burden, but rather was associated with the loss of a wound healing phenotype in keratinocytes. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that during cutaneous leishmaniasis, IL-22 can play a previously unappreciated role in controlling leishmania-induced immunopathology.