4.7 Review

Neutrophils and Visceral Leishmaniasis: Impact on innate immune response and cross-talks with macrophages and dendritic cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 236, Issue 4, Pages 2255-2267

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.30029

Keywords

dendritic cells; innate immunity and leishmaniasis; macrophages; neutrophils; sandfly; trojan horse; visceral leishmaniasis

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology Promotion of University Research and Scientific Excellence (DST-PURSE) [SR/PURSE Phase 2/18 (G)]
  2. Department of Science and Technology, Science& Engineering Research Board (DST-SERB) [SB/YS/LS-140/2014]

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Neutrophils play a crucial role in the initial defense against Leishmania parasites and their interaction with the parasites can influence the outcome of the disease. Recent research has provided new insights into the role of neutrophils in visceral leishmaniasis, as well as their early interaction with the parasite in mouse models of cutaneous leishmaniasis.
Neutrophils with their array of microbicidal activities are the first innate immune cells to guard against infection. They are also most crucial for the host's initial defense against Leishmania parasites which cause clinically diverse diseases ranging from self-healing cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) to a more severe visceral form, visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Neutrophils are recruited in large numbers at the infection site after bite of sandfly, which is the vector for the disease. The initial interaction of neutrophils with the parasites may modulate the subsequent innate and adaptive immune responses and hence affect the disease outcome. The purpose of this review is to comprehensively appraise the role of neutrophils during the early stages of Leishmania infection with a focus on the visceral form of the disease. In the past decade, new insights regarding the role of neutrophils in VL have surfaced which have been extensively elaborated in the present review. In addition, since much of the information regarding neutrophil-Leishmania early interaction has accumulated through studies on mouse models of CL, these studies are also revisited. We begin by reviewing the factors which drive the recruitment of neutrophils at the site of injection by the sandfly. We then discuss the studies delineating the molecular mechanisms involved in the uptake of the Leishmania parasite by neutrophils and how the parasite subverts their microbicidal functions. In the end, the interaction of infected neutrophils with macrophages and dendritic cells is summarized.

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