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. 2005 Apr 22;23(22):2825-40.
doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2004.11.061.

Protection against experimental visceral leishmaniasis infection in dogs immunized with purified excreted secreted antigens of Leishmania infantum promastigotes

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Protection against experimental visceral leishmaniasis infection in dogs immunized with purified excreted secreted antigens of Leishmania infantum promastigotes

Jean-Loup Lemesre et al. Vaccine. .

Abstract

The capacity of naturally excreted secreted antigens easily purified from culture supernatant of Leishmania infantum promastigotes (LiESAp), successfully cultivated in completely defined medium called CDM/LP [Lemesre JL. Methods for the culture in vitro of different stages of tissue parasites. International publication WO 94/26899, 1994; Merlen T, Sereno D, Brajon N, Rostand F, Lemesre JL. Leishmania spp: completely defined medium without serum and macromolecules (CDM/LP) for the continuous in vitro cultivation of infective promastigote forms. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1999;60(1):41-50] to protect dogs against experimental L. infantum infections is described. Eighteen healthy Beagle dogs were allocated into four groups that received at a 3-week interval either two subcutaneous injections of 50 microg (group 2, n = 3), 100 microg (group3, n = 6) and 200 microg (group 4, n = 3) LiESAp in formulation with muramyl dipeptide (MDP) or similar injections of placebo (group 1, n = 6). Dogs were intravenously infected with 10(8) metacyclic L. infantum promastigotes. Promastigotes of the MHOM/MA/67/ITMAP-263 and MHOM/FR/78/LEM75 strains were, respectively, administered 2 months (at day 84, homologous challenge 1) and 8 months post-immunization (at day 273, heterologous challenge 2). The data indicated that vaccine candidate confers total protection (100%) against challenges 1 and 2 in dogs from groups 3 and 4 and intermediate protection (66.7%) against challenge 1 in dogs from group 2 as determined by parasite detection in bone marrow aspirates during 14 months post-challenge follow-up. All placebo dogs of group 1 were found infected and failed to respond to LiESAp in cell-mediated assays before and after both challenges. Increased levels of total anti-leishmanial antibodies were exclusively detected in infected dogs from group 1. Vaccine-induced protection correlates with an early establishment of a long lasting predominantly Th1-type cellular immune response specifically directed against LiESAp before and after experimental infections, as demonstrated by: (i) anti-LiESAp IgG2 reactivity, and (ii) LiESAp-specific lymphocyte proliferation assays and enhanced NO-mediated anti-leishmanial activity of canine monocyte-derived macrophages (CM-DM) in response to higher IFNgamma production by T-cells, when L. infantum-infected CM-DM were co-cultured with autologous lymphocytes. Overall, our results support the view that a LiESAp vaccine might be useful in a promising vaccination approach against natural L. infantum infection.

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