Navegando por Autor "Borja Cabrera, Gulnara Patricia"
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Item Effective immunotherapy against canine visceral leishmaniasis with the FML-vaccine.(2004) Borja Cabrera, Gulnara Patricia; Mendes, Amanda Cruz; Souza, Edilma Paraguai de; Okada, Lilian Y. Hashimoto; Trivellato, Fernando Antonio de Assis; Kawasaki, Jarbas Kiyoshi Alves; Costa, Andreia Cerqueira; Reis, Alexandre Barbosa; Genaro, Odair; Batista, Leopoldina Maria Melo; Palatnik, Marcos; Souza, Clarisa Beatriz Palatnik deThe potential effect of the fucose mannose ligand (FML)-vaccine on immunotherapy of canine visceral leishmaniasis was assayed on five mongrel dogs experimentally infected withLeishmania donovani and on 21 Leishmania chagasi naturally infected dogs when seropositive to FML but completely asymptomatic. The clinical signs of the experimentally infected, symptomatic dogs only disappeared after the complete vaccination. Protection was obtained in 3/5 animals that remained asymptomatic, IDR positive and parasite free, 1 year after infection. Furthermore, the asymptomatic, FML-vaccine treated dogs showed stable anti-FML IgG1 levels, increasing IgG2 levels and 79–95% of positive DTH response, during the whole experiment. Twenty-two months after complete vaccination, no obits due to visceral leishmaniasis were recorded and 90% of these dogs were still asymptomatic, healthy and parasite free. On the other hand, 37% (17/46 dogs) kala-azar obits were recorded in a control group that received no treatment during the same period, and that was FML-seropositive and asymtpomatic at the beginning of the assay. Our results indicate that the FML-vaccine was effective in the immunotherapy against visceral leishmaniasis of asymptomatic infected dogs. Normal proportions of CD4 and CD21 lymphocytes were detected in PBMC by FACS analysis, in dogs submitted to immunotherapy, suggesting their non-infectious condition. All animals showed as well significantly increased percents of CD8 lymphocytes as expected for Quillajasaponin (QuilA) vaccine treatments.Item Immunotherapy against experimental canine visceral leishmaniasis with the saponin enriched-Leishmune ® vaccine.(2007) Santos, Fernanda Nunes; Borja Cabrera, Gulnara Patricia; Myashiro, L. M.; Grechi, Juliana; Reis, Alexandre Barbosa; Moreira, Márcio Antônio Batistela; Martins Filho, Olindo Assis; Luvizotto, Maria Cecília Rui; Menz, Ingrid; Pessôa, L. M.; Gonçalves, Pablo Rodrigues; Palatnik, Marcos; Souza, Clarisa Beatriz Palatnik deIn order to assess the immunotherapeutic potential on canine visceral leishmaniasis of the Leishmune ® vaccine, formulated with an increased adjuvant concentration (1 mg of saponin rather than 0.5 mg), 24 mongrel dogs were infected with Leishmania (L.) chagasi . The enriched-Leishmune ® vaccine was injected on month 6, 7 and 8 after infection, when animals were seropositive and symptomatic. The control group were injected with a saline solution. Leishmune ® -treated dogs showed significantly higher levels of anti-FML IgG antibodies (ANOVA; p < 0.0001), a higher and stable IgG2 and a decreasing IgG1 response, pointing to a TH1 T cell mediated response. The vaccine had the following effects: it led to more positive delayed type hypersensitivity reactions against Leishmania lysate in vaccinated dogs (75%) than in controls (50%), to a decreased average of CD4+ Leishmania -specific lymphocytes in saline controls (32.13%) that fell outside the 95% confidence interval of the vaccinees (41.62%, CI95% 43.93–49.80) and an increased average of the clinical scores from the saline controls (17.83) that falls outside the 95% confidence interval for the Leishmune ® immunotherapy-treated dogs (15.75, CI95% 13.97–17.53). All dogs that received the vaccine were clustered, and showed lower clinical scores and normal CD4+ counts, whereas 42% of the untreated dogs showed very diminished CD4+ and higher clinical score. The increase in clinical signs of the saline treated group was correlated with an increase in anti-FML antibodies (p < 0.0001), the parasitological evidence ( p = 0.038) and a decrease inLeishmania -specific CD4+ lymphocyte proportions (p = 0.035). These results confirm the immunotherapeutic potential of the enriched-Leishmune ® vaccine. The vaccine reduced the clinical symptoms and evidence of parasite, modulating the outcome of the infection and the dog’s potential infectiosity to phlebotomines. The enriched-Leishmune ® vaccine was subjected to a safety analysis and found to be well tolerated and safe