Abstract
Leishmaniasis is a health-threatening vector-borne disease in almost 90 different countries. While a prophylactic human vaccine is not yet available, the fact that recovery from leishmaniasis establishes lifelong immunity against secondary infection suggests that a vaccine is attainable. In the past, deliberate infection with virulent parasites, termed Leishmanization, was used as a live-vaccine against cutaneous leishmaniasis and effectively protected against vector-transmitted disease in endemic areas. However, the practice was discontinued due to major complications including non-healing skin lesions, exacerbation of skin diseases, and the potential impact of immunosuppression. Instead, tremendous effort has been made to develop killed, live attenuated, and non-living subunit formulations. Many of these formulations produce promising experimental results but have failed in field trials or against experimental challenge with infected sand flies. Recently, experimental models of leishmanization have unraveled the critical role of parasite persistence in maintaining the circulating CD4+ effector T cells responsible for mitigating the inflammatory response early after sand fly challenge and mediating protective immunity. Here, we put forward the notion that for effective vaccine design (especially non-living vaccines), the role of antigen persistence and pre-existing effector CD4+ T cells should be taken into consideration. We propose that dendritic cell-based vaccination strategies warrant greater attention because of their potential to act as long-term antigen depots, thereby emulating this critical requirement of naturally acquired protective immunity against infected sand fly challenge.
Highlights
TO LEISHMANIASIS AND LEISHMANIA VACCINE EFFORTSLeishmaniasis is a parasitic vector-borne disease caused by flagellated protozoans from the Leishmania genus
Not discussed in the paper, these results suggest that LmAg-CpG-pulsed bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs) vaccination combined with acute exposure to infection could provide long-term protective immunity to subsequent exposures without the confounding factors associated with leishmanization alone
This review presents evidence that suggests non-living vaccines are at risk of failure to protect against sandfly transmission of Leishmania parasite if they do not provide persistent antigen
Summary
Leishmaniasis is a parasitic vector-borne disease caused by flagellated protozoans from the Leishmania genus. A literature review on Leishmania vaccine history reveals that leishmanization (deliberate inoculation of live wild-type parasites without the disease exacerbating factors associated with sandfly bites) remains the most efficacious strategy to generate protective immunity against subsequent infected sandfly challenge both in field trials [28] and experimental models [29]. An unresolved concern about Leishmania vaccination in the past was that protection against needle challenge in experimental animal models did not translate to protection when similar “first-generation” vaccine formulations were tested in human field trials employing natural sandfly transmission [7] Based upon these observations, Peters et al investigated the effect of vector transmission on the efficacy of an ALM/CpG vaccine (autoclaved L. major plus CpG oligonucleotide) following needle versus sandfly challenge of L. major in mice. The early, bite-mediated, inflammatory response appears to influence infection outcome and must be considered when testing vaccines
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