monocyte chemotactic protein 1 in plasma from soluble leishmania antigen-stimulated whole blood as a potential biomarker of the cellular immune response to leishmania infantum
;Ana V. Ibarra-Meneses;Carmen Sanchez;Jorge Alvar;Javier Moreno;Eugenia Carrillo
sudebno-meditsinskaia ekspertiza2017Vol. 8pp. -
244
ibarra-meneses2017frontiersmonocyte
Abstract
New biomarkers are needed to identify asymptomatic Leishmania infection as well as immunity following vaccination or treatment. With the aim of finding a robust biomarker to assess an effective cellular immune response, monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP-1) was examined in plasma from soluble Leishmania antigen (SLA)-stimulated whole blood collected from subjects living in a Leishmania infantum-endemic area. MCP-1, expressed 110 times more strongly than IL-2, identified 87.5% of asymptomatic subjects and verified some asymptomatic subjects close to the cutoff. MCP-1 was also significantly elevated in all patients cured of visceral leishmaniasis (VL), unlike IL-2, indicating the specific memory response generated against Leishmania. These results show MCP-1 to be a robust candidate biomarker of immunity that could be used as a marker of cure and to both select and follow the population in vaccine phase I–III human clinical trials with developed rapid, easy-to-use field tools.