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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Infections in immunocompetent and immune-deficient mice with promastigotes of a North American isolate of Leishmania infantum.

Journal:
Veterinary parasitology
Year:
2005
Authors:
Rosypal, Alexa C et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology · United States
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Leishmania infantum, an etiologic agent of zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis, is widespread among foxhounds in the United States. Experimental infections with a North American isolate of L. infantum were evaluated using two inoculation routes in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed mouse strains. Groups of 2-5 interferon gamma gene knockout (IFN-gamma-KO) (BALB/c-Ifng), inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS) gene knockout (iNOS-KO) (C57BL/6), B-cell-deficient (microMT) (C57BL/6), and BALB/c mice were intravenously (i.v.) or subcutaneously (s.c.) inoculated with various doses of promastigotes of the LIVT-1 strain of L. infantum. None of the mice developed clinical signs of leishmaniasis during the 8-9 weeks of the study. Promastigotes were cultured from spleens of all i.v.-infected mice by 3 days post culture. Spleens from s.c.-infected mice inoculated with greater than 1 x 10(6) parasites became culture positive 3-24 days post culture, but promastigotes were not cultured from mice infected with 1 x 10(5) or 5 x 10(5) LIVT-1 promastigotes. Histological lesions were prominent in the livers of i.v.-infected mice but were mild to nonexistent in s.c. infection. Serological responses were low and transient determined by indirect fluorescent antibody testing in all groups. These results indicate that the i.v. route of infection is superior to the s.c. route in a mouse model of North American leishmaniasis and that mice lacking INF-gamma, iNOS or mice that are B-cell-deficient are not more susceptible to acute infection.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15893066/