Abstract

Leishmaniasis is a poverty-related disease, the chemotherapy of which is based on few drugs. The in vitro macrophage-amastigote model using mouse peritoneal cells, human-monocyte transformed macrophages and immortalized cell lines have been used to test new and safe antileishmanial drugs. Considering the differences for drug sensitivities between these Leishmania infected cells, the efficacy of amphotericin B, pentavalent antimonial, miltefosine and resveratrol was evaluated in a recently developed ex vivo culture of macrophages isolated from mouse lesion induced by L. amazonensis (CD11b+F4/80+CD68+CD14+) compared with infected peritoneal macrophages (CD11b+F4/80+CD68+CD14+). The results show that IC50 values of amphotericin B, miltefosine and pentavalent antimonial for parasites in lesional and peritoneal macrophages were similar, although high doses of these compounds did not result in total clearance of parasites in lesional cells (amphotericin B), peritoneal cells (miltefosine) and both cell cultures (pentavalent antimonial). Amastigotes infecting lesional macrophages were more resistant to resveratrol as compared to parasites in peritoneal macrophages. The cytoxicity of miltefosine and resveratrol was higher in infected peritoneal macrophages than in lesional cells. These data suggest that the antileishmanial effect and citotoxicity of some anti leishmanial compounds are dependent of macrophage source and mouse peritoneal macrophages loaded with amastigotes do not represent the lesion cell.

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