4.7 Article

SOD1 Plasma Level as a Biomarker for Therapeutic Failure in Cutaneous Leishmaniasis

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 210, Issue 2, Pages 306-310

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiu087

Keywords

Cutaneous leishmaniasis; Leishmania amazonensis; Leishmania braziliensis; Diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis; Oxidative burst; Parasite escape mechanism; Interkingdom signaling; Superoxide dismutase; Biomarker; Therapeutic failure

Funding

  1. Brazilian National Research Council CNPq
  2. PRONEX (CNPq-FAPESB)
  3. Alban Program
  4. European Union Program of High Level Scholarship for Latin America [E06D103200BR]

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We show that increased plasma superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) levels are statistically significant predictors of the failure of pentavalent antimony treatment for cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania braziliensis. In Leishmania amazonensis-infected patients, host SOD1 levels can be used to discriminate between localized and drug-resistant diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis. Using in situ transcriptomics (nCounter), we demonstrate a significant positive correlation between host SOD1 and interferon alpha/beta messenger RNA (mRNA) levels, as well as interkingdom correlation between host SOD1 and parasite SOD2/4 mRNA levels. In human macrophages, in vitro treatment with SOD1 increases the parasite burden and induces a diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis-like morphology. Thus, SOD1 is a clinically relevant biomarker and a therapeutic target in both localized and diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis.

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