Abstract

Pathogenic species of Leptospira cause leptospirosis, a bacterial zoonotic disease with a global distribution affecting over one million people annually. Rats are regarded as one of the most significant reservoir hosts of infection for human disease, and in the absence of clinical signs of infection, excrete large numbers of organisms in their urine. A unique biological equilibrium exists between pathogenic leptospires and reservoir hosts of infection, but surprisingly, little is known concerning the host's cellular immune response that facilitates persistent renal colonization. To address this deficiency, we established and applied an immunocompetent inbred rat model of persistent renal colonization; leptospires were detected in urine of experimentally infected rats by 3 weeks post-infection and remained positive until 8 weeks post-infection. However, there was little, if any, evidence of inflammation in colonized renal tubules. At 8 weeks post-infection, a robust antibody response was detected against lipopolysaccharide and protein outer membrane (OM) components. Purified B and T cells derived from the spleen of infected and non-infected rats proliferated in response to stimulation with 0.5 μg of OM fractions of Leptospira, including CD4+ T cells, which comprised 40% of proliferating cells, compared to 25% in non-infected controls. However, analysis of gene expression did not determine which immunoregulatory pathways were activated. Lymphocytes purified from the lymph node draining the site of colonization, the renal lymph node, also showed an increase in percentage of proliferating B and T cells. However, in contrast to a phenotype of 40% CD4+ T cells in the spleen, the phenotype of proliferating T cells in the renal lymph node comprised 65% CD4+ T cells. These results confirm that the renal lymph node, the local lymphoid organ, is a dominant site containing Leptospira reactive CD4+ T cells and highlight the need to consider the local, vs. systemic, immune responses during renal colonization infection. The use of inbred immunocompetent rats provides a novel tool to further elucidate those pathophysiological pathways that facilitate the unique biological equilibrium observed in reservoir hosts of leptospirosis.

Highlights

  • Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease of global significance caused by a unique group of bacteria (Bharti et al, 2003)

  • Host-pathogen relationships have evolved over millennia and range from asymptomatic, chronic and persistent carriage in some hosts compared to acute, fulminant disease in others

  • The unique biological equilibrium that exists between reservoir hosts of infection and bacterial pathogens is facilitated in part by the ability of the pathogen to express appropriate virulence factors that maintain infection, yet minimize detection and subsequent clearance by host immune responses

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease of global significance caused by a unique group of bacteria (Bharti et al, 2003). Contact with urine from infected reservoir hosts, or contaminated water sources, can result in disease when pathogenic leptospires penetrate breaches of the skin, or mucosal surfaces, and disseminate haematogenously to cause a range of clinical symptoms from mild fever, to icteric Weil’s disease and pulmonary hemorrhage syndrome. Mortality in these incidental hosts ranges from 10 to 70% (McBride et al, 2005). Rats are regarded as one of the most significant reservoir hosts of infection for human disease (Costa et al, 2014), many domestic animal species are asymptomatic carriers, including dogs, cattle and pigs (Rojas et al, 2010; Ellis, 2015)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.