Litcius/Paper detail

<i>Leishmania tarentolae</i> : A new frontier in the epidemiology and control of the leishmaniases

Jairo Alfonso Mendoza‐Roldan, Jan Votýpka, Claudio Bandi, Sara Epis, David Modrý, Lucie Tichá, Petr Volf, Domenico Otranto

2022Transboundary and Emerging Diseases36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Leishmaniasis (or the leishmaniases), classified as a neglected tropical parasitic disease, is found in parts of the tropics, subtropics and southern Europe. Leishmania parasites are transmitted by the bite of phlebotomine sand flies and million cases of human infection occur annually. Leishmania tarentolae has been historically considered a non-pathogenic protozoan of reptiles, which has been studied mainly for its potential biotechnological applications. However, some strains of L. tarentolae appear to be transiently infective to mammals. In areas where leishmaniasis is endemic, recent molecular diagnostics and serological positivity to L. tarentolae in humans and dogs have spurred interest in the interactions between these mammalian hosts, reptiles and Leishmania infantum, the main aetiologic agent of human and canine leishmaniasis. In this review, we discuss the systematics and biology of L. tarentolae in the insect vectors and the vertebrate hosts and address questions about evolution of reptilian leishmaniae. Furthermore, we discuss the possible usefulness of L. tarentolae for new vaccination strategies.

Topics & Concepts

LeishmaniasisLeishmaniaBiologyOld WorldTropical diseaseLeishmania infantumSubtropicsCanine leishmaniasisNeglected tropical diseasesParasitic diseaseSerologyVirologyZoologyDiseaseVisceral leishmaniasisParasite hostingEcologyImmunologyMedicinePathologyAntibodyComputer scienceWorld Wide WebResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesTrypanosoma species research and implications
<i>Leishmania tarentolae</i> : A new frontier in the epidemiology and control of the leishmaniases | Litcius