4.6 Article

Intra-Specific Diversity of Leishmania major Isolates: A Key Determinant of Tunisian Zoonotic Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Clinical Polymorphism

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10030505

Keywords

L; major; zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL); virulence; clinical polymorphism

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH/NIAID/DMID Grant [5P50AI074178]
  2. Tunisian Ministry of Higher Education and Research

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The severity of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania parasites can be influenced by the virulence of the parasite. This study found that resistance to complement lysis and binding of lectins to the parasite's surface are important markers of parasite virulence.
The clinical expression of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL) caused by Leishmania (L.) major parasites has a broad spectrum ranging from asymptomatic infection to self-limited cutaneous sores or severe disease. In concert with the host immune responses, the vector variability and the number of bites, genetic variation between L. major isolates might impact on the clinical output of the disease. We investigated herein the intra-specific variability of L. major field isolates independently of host or vector factors and then tried to correlate parasite variability to ZCL severity in corresponding patients. Several assays were applied, i.e., in vivo pathogenicity of promastigotes in a BALB/c mice model, resistance/sensibility to complement lysis, in vitro growth kinetics, and expression of different lectins on the promastigote surface. Combining all these parameters allowed us to conclude that the resistance to complement lysis and PNA/Jacalin lectins binding to parasite surfaces are important markers of parasite virulence. These factors correlate significantly with clinic polymorphism of ZCL and modestly with genetic micro-heterogeneity, a characteristic we previously revealed with a MLMT profile.

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