Abstract

During Leishmania infection, tissue parasitism at different sites may differ and imply distinct immunopathological patterns during canine visceral leishmaniasis (CVL). For this reason, we have assessed by flow cytometry the impact of spleen and skin parasite density on the phenotypic profile of splenocytes and circulating leukocytes of 40 Brazilian dogs naturally infected by Leishmania chagasi categorized according to splenic and cutaneous parasite load. Our major statistically significant findings demonstrated that dogs with splenic high parasitism presented a significant decrease in absolute counts of CD5+ T lymphocytes in comparison with dogs presenting splenic medium parasitism. Moreover, a decrease in the absolute number of circulating monocytes was observed as a hallmark of high parasitism. The increased frequency of CD8+ T cells is associated with low splenic parasitism during CVL. Although we did not found any significant differences between the immunophenotypic analysis performed in circulating lymphocytes according to cutaneous parasite load, there were negative correlations between CD5+ and CD8+ T cells and cutaneous parasite density reemphasizes the role of T cell-mediated immune response in resistance mechanisms during ongoing CVL. These results add new insights about the pathogenesis of CVL and may help in the establishment of additional tools for future studies on drugs and vaccine approaches.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call