Artigo Revisado por pares

A protective cocktail vaccine against murine cutaneous leishmaniasis with DNA encoding cysteine proteinases of Leishmania major

2001; Elsevier BV; Volume: 19; Issue: 25-26 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0264-410x(01)00081-0

ISSN

1873-2518

Autores

Sima Rafati, Ali Hatef Salmanian, Tahereh Taheri, Manije Vafa, Nicolás Fasel,

Tópico(s)

Toxin Mechanisms and Immunotoxins

Resumo

The protection elicited by the intramuscular injection of two plasmid DNAs encoding Leishmania major cysteine proteinase type I (CPb) and type II (CPa) was evaluated in a murine model of experimental cutaneous leishmaniasis. BALB/c mice were immunized either separately or with a cocktail of the two plasmids expressing CPa or CPb. It was only when the cpa and cpb genes were co-injected that long lasting protection against parasite challenge was achieved. Similar protection was also observed when animals were first immunized with cpa/cpb DNA followed by recombinant CPa/CPb boost. Analysis of the immune response showed that protected animals developed a specific Th1 immune response, which was associated with an increase of IFN-gamma production. This is the first report demonstrating that co-injection of two genes expressing different antigens induces a long lasting protective response, whereas the separate injection of cysteine proteases genes is not protective.

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