Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.ufba.br/handle/ri/12049
metadata.dc.type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Chemokines and chemokine receptors coordinate the inflammatory immune response in human cutaneous leishmaniasis
Other Titles: Human Immunology
Authors: Campanelli, Ana Paula
Brodskyn, Claudia Ida
Boaventura, Viviane Sampaio
Silva, Claire
Barral-Netto, Manoel
Barral, Aldina Maria Prado
metadata.dc.creator: Campanelli, Ana Paula
Brodskyn, Claudia Ida
Boaventura, Viviane Sampaio
Silva, Claire
Barral-Netto, Manoel
Barral, Aldina Maria Prado
Abstract: Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) includes different clinical manifestations displaying diverse intensities of dermal inflammatory infiltrate. Diffuse CL (DCL) cases are hyporesponsive, and lesions show very few lymphocytes and a predominance of macrophages. In contrast, localized CL (LCL) cases are responsive to leishmanial antigen, and lesions exhibit granulocytes and mononuclear cell infiltration in the early phases, changing to a pattern with numerous lymphocytes and macrophages later in the lesion. Therefore, different chemokines may affect the predominance of cell infiltration in distinct clinical manifestations. In lesions from LCL patients, we examined by flow cytometry the presence of different chemokines and their receptors in T cells, and we verified a higher expression of CXCR3 in the early stages of LCL (less than 30 days of infection) and a higher expression of CCR4 in the late stages of disease (more than 60 days of infection). We also observed a higher frequency of T cells producing IL-10 in the late stage of LCL. Using immunohistochemistry, we observed a higher expression of CCL7, CCL17 in lesions from late LCL, as well as CCR4 suggesting a preferential recruitment of regulatory T cells in the late LCL. Comparing lesions from LCL and DCL patients, we observed a higher frequency of CCL7 in DCL lesions. These results point out the importance of the chemokines, defining the different types of cells recruited to the site of the infection, which could be related to the outcome of infection as well as the clinical form observed.
Keywords: Chemokines
Cutaneous leishmaniasis
Inflammation
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/12049
Issue Date: 2010
Appears in Collections:Artigo Publicado em Periódico (Biologia)

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