Affiliation:
1. Infectious Diseases Research Center, CHUL Research Center, Department of Medical Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Laval University, Quebec, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Leishmania
is an intracellular pathogen that replicates inside macrophages. Activated macrophages produce a specific subset of cytokines that play an important role in the control of
Leishmania
infections. As part of our interest in developing suicide parasites that produce abortive infections for the purposes of vaccination, we engineered recombinant
Leishmania major
strains producing biologically active granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). We showed that GM-CSF is being produced in the phagosomes of infected macrophages and that it can be detected in the culture supernatants of both infected macrophages and extracellular parasites. Our data support the notion that GM-CSF secreted by both developmental forms of recombinant
L. major
can activate macrophages to produce high levels of proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1β (IL-1β), IL-6, and IL-18 and various chemokines including RANTES/CCL5, MIP-1α/CCL3, MIP-1β/CCL4, MIP-2/CXCL2, and MCP-1/CCL2, which enhance parasite killing. Indeed, GM-CSF-expressing parasites survive poorly in macrophages in vitro and produce delayed lesion development in susceptible BALB/c mice in vivo. Selective killing of intracellular
Leishmania
expressing cytokine genes capable of activating cellular responses may constitute a promising strategy to control and/or prevent parasitic infections.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
34 articles.
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