Genetics of Host Response to Leishmania tropica in Mice – Different Control of Skin Pathology, Chemokine Reaction, and Invasion into Spleen and Liver

Background Leishmaniasis is a disease caused by protozoan parasites of genus Leishmania. The frequent involvement of Leishmania tropica in human leishmaniasis has been recognized only recently. Similarly as L. major, L. tropica causes cutaneous leishmaniasis in humans, but can also visceralize and cause systemic illness. The relationship between the host genotype and disease manifestations is poorly understood because there were no suitable animal models. Methods We studied susceptibility to L. tropica, using BALB/c-c-STS/A (CcS/Dem) recombinant congenic (RC) strains, which differ greatly in susceptibility to L. major. Mice were infected with L. tropica and skin lesions, cytokine and chemokine levels in serum, and parasite numbers in organs were measured. Principal Findings Females of BALB/c and several RC strains developed skin lesions. In some strains parasites visceralized and were detected in spleen and liver. Importantly, the strain distribution pattern of symptoms caused by L. tropica was different from that observed after L. major infection. Moreover, sex differently influenced infection with L. tropica and L. major. L. major-infected males exhibited either higher or similar skin pathology as females, whereas L. tropica-infected females were more susceptible than males. The majority of L. tropica-infected strains exhibited increased levels of chemokines CCL2, CCL3 and CCL5. CcS-16 females, which developed the largest lesions, exhibited a unique systemic chemokine reaction, characterized by additional transient early peaks of CCL3 and CCL5, which were not present in CcS-16 males nor in any other strain. Conclusion Comparison of L. tropica and L. major infections indicates that the strain patterns of response are species-specific, with different sex effects and largely different host susceptibility genes.


Introduction
Several hundred million people in 88 countries are living in areas where they can contract leishmaniasis, a disease caused by intracellular protozoan parasites of the genus Leishmania and transmitted to vertebrates by phlebotomine sand flies. Leishmania parasites infect professional phagocytes (neutrophils, monocytes and macrophages), as well as dendritic cells and fibroblasts [1]. The main vertebrate host target cell is the macrophage, where parasites multiply, eventually rupture the cell, and spread to uninfected cells [2]. As macrophages migrate to all mammalian tissues, Leishmania parasites have a great potential for damaging bodily functions. In the dermis, they cause the cutaneous form of the disease (which can be localized or diffuse); in the mucosa, they result in mucocutaneous leishmaniasis; and the metastatic spread of infection to the spleen and liver leads to visceral leishmaniasis. One of the major factors determining the type of pathology is the species of Leishmania [3]. However, the transmitting vector, as well as genotype, nutritional status of the host, and environmental and social factors also have a large impact on the outcome of the disease [3,4]. That is why even patients, infected by the same species of Leishmania, develop different symptoms [3] and may differ in their response to therapy [5]. The basis of this heterogeneity is not well understood [6], but part of this variation is likely genetic. Numerous potentially relevant genes were reported (reviewed in [7]).
The extent of involvement of Leishmania tropica in human leishmaniasis has been recognized only recently. The western limit of L. tropica appears to be the Greek Island of Zakynthos, the disease has been found in Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Israel, Morocco, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Pakistan, Kenya, Ethiopia and Namibia, and at its eastern limits in India (reviewed in [8]). While L. major is a zoonosis with mainly rodent (Gerbillidae) reservoir hosts, L. tropica can circulate among humans without the involvement of animal reservoirs, but zoonotic transmission also occurs [9]. Similarly to L. major, L. tropica causes cutaneous leishmaniasis in humans. Moreover, L. tropica was also reported to visceralize and cause an initially not understood systemic illness in veterans returning from endemic areas in the Middle East [10], as well as the classical visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) in India [11], and the disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis accompanied with visceral leishmaniasis in Iran [12].
A suitable animal model for study of this parasite would contribute to functional dissection of the clinical course of infection. Golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) have been considered to be the best model host of the L. tropica infection, but this host is not inbred and hence not suitable for many studies. However, several strains of L. tropica from Afghanistan, India [13], and Turkey [14] have been described to cause cutaneous disease in inbred BALB/c mice, thus providing a better defined host. In comparison with widely studied immune response to L. major infection (reviewed in [15]) and its genetic control (reviewed in [7]), little is known about L. tropica in mouse [13,14,16]. Here we aimed to study genetics of susceptibility to L. tropica in the mouse. We analyzed response to L. tropica in CcS/Dem (CcS) recombinant congenic (RC) strains [17] derived from the background strain BALB/cHeA (BALB/c) and the donor strain STS. Each CcS strain contains a different unique random set of about 12.5% genes from the donor strain STS and 87.5% genes from the background strain BALB/c. These strains have been already successfully used for analysis of infection with Leishmania major [18][19][20][21][22]. The RC system enabled us to analyze organ pathology and systemic disease after infection with L. tropica and their genetic control.

Mice
Males and females of strains BALB/c, STS and selected RC strains [17,23] were tested. When used for these experiments, RC strains were in more than 38 generation of inbreeding and therefore highly homozygous. During the experiment, male and female mice were placed into separate rooms and males were caged individually. The research had complied with all relevant European Union guidelines for work with animals and was approved by the Institutional Animal Care Committee of the Institute of Molecular Genetics AS CR and by Departmental Expert Committee for the Approval of Projects of Experiments on Animals of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.

Parasite
Leishmania tropica from Urfa, Turkey (MHOM/1999/TR/SU23) was used for infecting mice. Amastigotes were transformed to promastigotes using SNB-9 [24], 1610 7 stationary phase promastigotes from subculture 2 have been inoculated in 50 ml of sterile saline s.c. into the tail base, with promastigote secretory gel (PSG) collected from the midgut of L. tropica-infected Phlebotomus sergenti females (laboratory colony originating from L. tropica focus in Urfa). PSG was collected as described [25]. The amount corresponding to one sand fly female was used per mouse.

Disease phenotype
The size of the skin lesions was measured weekly using a Vernier caliper gauge. The mice infected with L. tropica were killed 21 or 43 weeks after inoculation. Mice infected with L. major were killed 8 weeks after infection. Blood, spleen, liver and inguinal lymph nodes were collected for further analysis.

Quantification of parasite load in spleens and inguinal lymph nodes
The current semi-quantitative technique is based on the limiting dilution assay [26]. We modified the procedure by using only a single pre-selected cell concentration, and parasite count was

Author Summary
Several hundred million people are exposed to the risk of leishmaniasis, a disease caused by intracellular protozoan parasites of several Leishmania species and transmitted by phlebotomine sand flies. In humans, L. tropica causes cutaneous form of leishmaniasis with painful and longpersisting lesions in the site of the insect bite, but the parasites can also penetrate to internal organs. The relationship between the host genes and development of the disease was demonstrated for numerous infectious diseases. However, the search for susceptibility genes in the human population could be a difficult task. In such cases, animal models may help to discover the role of different genes in interactions between the parasite and the host. Unfortunately, the literature contains only a few publications about the use of animals for L. tropica studies. Here, we report an animal model suitable for genetic, pathological and drug studies in L. tropica infection. We show how the host genotype influences different disease symptoms: skin lesions, parasite dissemination to the lymph nodes, spleen and liver, and increase of levels of chemokines CCL2, CCL3 and CCL5 in serum.
Genetic Influence on Susceptibility to L. tropica www.plosntds.org measured with a Coulter Counter CBC5 (Coulter Electronics Inc., Hialeah, FL). In comparison with the original limiting dilution technique, this modified culture method is less laborious and allows rapid estimation of parasite number.
Preparation of cells must be carried out under sterile conditions. During preparation, all samples, which were not immediately worked with, were kept on ice. Inguinal lymph nodes and quarters of spleens were disrupted in a glass homogenizer in complete RPMI (containing 5% of heat-inactivated fetal calf serum (Sigma-Aldrich, USA), 25 mM Hepes (Sigma-Aldrich, USA), 0.0005% bmercaptoethanol (Serva, Germany), 63.7 mg/ml penicillin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA), and 100 mg/ml streptomycin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA). The homogenate was passed through the nylon filter. The homogenizer was washed 3 times with 3 ml of sterile PBS after processing each lymph node. The samples were then centrifuged 8 min at 300 g, 4uC (centrifuge Eppendorf 5810 R, Eppendorf, Germany). The supernatant was removed and the cells were resuspended in 0.5 ml of complete Schneider's medium supplemented with 20% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum (Sigma-Aldrich, USA), 2% sterile fresh human urine, 50 mg/ml gentamicine (Sigma-Aldrich, USA), 63.7 mg/ml penicillin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA), and 100 mg/ml streptomycin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA). To count cells with a Coulter Counter CBC5 (Coulter Electronics Inc., Hialeah, FL), USA), 50 ml of the cell suspension was diluted in 20 ml of PBS. Ekoglobin (Hemax s.r.o., Czech Republic) was added to the diluent prior to counting to lyse red blood cells.
0.5 ml of the cell suspension (1610 5 cells per ml for lymph nodes and 2610 5 cells per ml for spleens) was cultivated in complete Schneider's medium in 48-well tissue culture plates (Costar, Corning Inc., USA) at 27uC (Biological thermostat BT 120 M, Labsystem, Finland) for 3 days. Each sample was prepared in triplicate. After incubation, 100 ml of a mixed sample from each well, containing Leishmania parasites released from lymph node or spleen cells were diluted in 20 ml of PBS and the parasite number was counted with the Coulter Counter.

Quantification of parasite load in livers
Parasite load was measured in frozen liver samples using PCR-ELISA according to the previously published protocol [27]. Briefly, total DNA was isolated using a standard proteinase procedure. For PCR, two primers (digoxigenin-labeled F 59-ATT TTA CAC CAA CCC CCA GTT-39 and biotin-labeled R 59-GTG GGG AGG GGG CGT TCT-39 (VBC Genomics Biosciences Research, Austria) were used for amplification of the 120-bp conservative region of the kinetoplast minicircle of Leishmania parasite, and 50 ng of extracted DNA was used per each PCR reaction. For a positive control, 20 ng of L. tropica DNA per reaction was amplified as a highest concentration of standard. A 40-cycle PCR reaction was used for detection. Parasite load was determined by analysis of the PCR product with the modified ELISA protocol (Pharmingen, USA). Concentration of Leishmania DNA was determined using the ELISA Reader Tecan and the curve fitter program KIM-E (Schoeller Pharma, Czech Republic) with least squares-based linear regression analysis.

Statistical analysis
The differences between CcS/Dem strains in parasite numbers in lymph nodes were evaluated by the analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Newman-Keuls multiple comparison using the program Statistica for Windows 8.0 (StatSoft, Inc., Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S.A.). Strain and age were fixed factors and individual experiments were considered as a random parameter. The differences in parameters between strains were evaluated using the Newman-Keuls multiple comparison test at 95% significance. Difference between sexes in parasite numbers in lymph nodes was analysed by Mann Whitney U test. Analysis of sex influence on lesion development after L. major infection was performed using General Linear Models, Univariate ANOVA, Statistica 8.0 with experiment as a random and age as a fixed parameter.

Results
Genetic differences in skin pathology caused by infection with L. tropica To study susceptibility to L. tropica we infected both females and males of the strains BALB/c, STS and RC strains CcS-3, CcS-5, CcS-11, CcS-12, CcS-16, CcS-18, and CcS-20.
In females, skin pathology started as a nodule at the site of L. tropica infection appearing between weeks 11 and 20, which transformed in susceptible strains into a skin lesion (Figure 1 Sex has different effect on skin pathology caused by L. tropica and L. major Sex differences observed in susceptibility to L. tropica led us to analyze sex influence in susceptibility to L. major. As our previous research with L. major was focused on analysis of females [28], in this study we have infected with L. major both females and males of strains BALB/c, STS and RC strains CcS-3, CcS-5, CcS-11, CcS-12, CcS-16, CcS-18, and CcS-20. Both males and females of all analyzed strains developed larger skin lesions after infection with L. major than when infected with L. tropica (Table 1, Figure 2A, B). The effect of sex was different in experiments with L. major and L. tropica. After the infection with L. tropica, females of CcS/Dem strains in most cases exhibited more extensive skin pathology than males (Figure 2 A, B), whereas after infection with L. major, skin lesions in males and females of strains BALB/c, STS, CcS-11, CcS-12, CcS-16 and CcS-20 did not differ, whereas males of strains CcS-3 (P = 0.001), CcS-5 (P = 0.001) and probably also CcS-18 (P = 0.043) developed larger skin lesions than females (Table 1).   Draining lymph nodes of all tested strains contained viable L. tropica parasites In vitro culture tests showed that all tested mice, including strains that did not exhibit any skin pathology, contained viable parasites in their inguinal lymph nodes both 21 and 43 weeks after infection ( Figure 3). Presence of parasites was also documented by staining of Leishmania in tissue smears with the anti-Leishmania lipophosphoglycan monoclonal antibody ( Figure 4) and by histological analysis of hematoxylin-eosin stained lymph nodes smears ( Figure S1).
None of the strains contained more parasites in the lymph nodes than the background parental strain BALB/c (Figure 3). At week 21 after infection, females of the strains STS and CcS-5 (P = 0.0002), and males of the strain CcS-5 (P = 0.0093) contained significantly lower parasite numbers than the strain BALB/c. At week 43 after infection, females of the strains STS, CcS-5 and CcS-11 (P = 0.00000001), and STS males (P = 0.0004) had significantly lower parasite load than BALB/c. At week 43, females of strain CcS-18 had higher parasite count than males (P = 0.0209), whereas males of the strain CcS-5 had higher parasite load than females (P = 0.0143). In both experiments counted together, females of CcS-18 (P = 0.0318) strain had higher parasite load than males, whereas STS males had higher parasite numbers than females (P = 0.0097) (Figure 3).

L. tropica can invade spleens and livers of several mouse strains
We did not observe any splenomegaly and hepatomegaly induced by infection with L. tropica. However, in vitro cultures have shown that 21 weeks after infection 50% (3 out of 6), 66.7% (2 out of 3) and 16.7% (1 out of 6) spleens of female mice of the strains CcS-3, -18 and -20, respectively, contained viable parasites. We were also able to cultivate parasites from 16.7% (1 out of 6) and 33.3% (2 out of 6) of spleens of males of the strains BALB/c and CcS-20, respectively. Parasite presence in spleens was confirmed by histological examination ( Figure 5). Parasite numbers in spleens of other strains were either below the level of detection or absent. Mice of the strain CcS-12 were not tested in the 21-week experiment.
Later we measured parasite load in frozen liver tissues using PCR-ELISA [27]. Unfortunately, an additional analysis of spleens and lymph nodes with PCR-ELISA cannot be performed as these organs were completely used for the cultivation assay.

Systemic reactions after infection with L. tropica
We measured levels of IL-4, IL-12, IFNc, GM-CSF (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor), CCL2 (chemokine ligand 2)/MCP-1 (monocyte chemotactic protein-1), CCL3/MIP-  No significant difference was found in IL-4, IL-12, IgE, IFNc and GM-CSF levels in serum of infected mice in comparison with noninfected controls (data not shown). We have observed an increase of serum levels of CCL2, CCL3 and CCL5 in infected strains; the largest increase was observed in strains CcS-11, CcS-16, CcS-18 and CcS-20. Figure 6 shows chemokine kinetics in females. Peak of increase of levels of these chemokines usually followed the start of lesion development. The increase was greater in females than in males (data not shown). Females of the strain CcS-16 exhibited a unique pattern of kinetics of CCL3 and CCL5 levels, which differed from all other strains ( Figure 6) and also from CcS-16 males (Figure 7). We observed two peaks of increase of serum levels of CCL3 and CCL5 in females of CcS-16 ( Figure 6); one before the development of skin lesions, the other after the decrease of lesion size, and there were almost no changes in CCL2 level. CcS-16 males had slight increase of CCL3, CCL5 (Figure 7), and CCL2 (data not shown); their kinetics of increase was similar to those in females and males of other strains.

Discussion
We have analyzed manifestations of the disease and the immunological parameters, which constitute the pathology of leishmaniasis in mice (organ pathology, parasite load in organs, systemic immune response) after infection with L. tropica. Compared with infection with L. major, infection progressed more slowly, some manifestations (skin lesions, parasite load in organs) were less pronounced, some (splenomegaly, hepatomegaly) were absent in the tested strains, and the systemic immune response also differed. These observations reveal new areas where the comparative research of infection by the two species can contribute to a deeper genetic and functional understanding of responses to both and perhaps eventually lead to a common conceptual framework for their interpretation. Such more general scheme could not be readily obtained by analysis of any of them alone. A progress in the heavily under-investigated biology of responses to L. tropica infection may also have a translational potential, which may be significant in view of the recent wider recognition of the etiological role of this parasite in human disease. The areas highlighted by our results include the likely species specificity of at least some susceptibility genes, the dramatically different effects of sex on the response, and a different regulation of some systemic responses.
Genotype effects are different in L. tropica and L. major  (Table 1), whereas with L. tropica CcS-12 and CcS-18 are clearly less susceptible than BALB/c and CcS-16 ( Figure 2). The mice of strain CcS-11 are intermediate after infection with L. major, but after infection with L. tropica they died with small or no lesions, low parasite load in lymph nodes and with no detectable parasites in spleens. The cause of mortality of CcS-11 was not revealed by standard histo-pathological investigation. These differences indicate presence of species-specific susceptibility genes. Such genes were indicated also by results of Anderson and coworkers [16] who found that strains BALB/c and C57BL/6 had similar numbers of parasites in ear dermis and exhibited similar ear lesion development after infection with L. tropica. In contrast, these two strains differ greatly in susceptibility to L. major [29], (reviewed in [7] and [15]). Poly-specific response genes that control susceptibility to both L. major and L. tropica probably also exist, as the strains STS and CcS-5 are resistant and BALB/c and CcS-16 are susceptible to cutaneous disease induced by both parasite species (Figure 2, Table 1).
These data complement information about species-specific and poly-specific control of infection to L. donovani, L. infantum, L. mexicana and L. major (reviewed in [7]). Poly-specific and speciesspecific susceptibility genes are not limited to leishmaniasis, but Genetic Influence on Susceptibility to L. tropica www.plosntds.org were also indicated in susceptibility to other pathogens such as Plasmodium (reviewed in [30]). The data on susceptibility to L. tropica and L. major reported here is relevant for investigators of other species-specific responses.
Females of the strain CcS-16 that contains a set of approximately 12.5% genes of the donor strain STS and 87.5% genes of the background strain BALB/c exhibited the largest skin pathology (Figure 1, Figure 2A), exceeding skin manifestations in both parental strains BALB/c and STS. The observations of progeny having a phenotype, which is beyond the range of the phenotype of its parents, are not rare in traits controlled by multiple genes. It was observed in different tests of immune responses of RC strains in vitro [31][32][33][34][35] and in vivo [28,36]. Similarly, analysis of gene expression from livers in chromosome substitution strains revealed that only 438 out of 4209 expression QTLs were inside the parental range [37]. These observations are due to multiple gene-gene interactions of QTLs, which in new combinations of these genes in RC or chromosomal substitution strains can lead to the appearance of new phenotypes that exceed their range in parental strains. Alternatively, with traits controlled by multiple loci, parental strains often contain susceptible alleles at some of them and resistant at others, and some progeny may receive predominantly susceptible alleles from both parents. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that the unique phenotype of CcS-16 may be caused by a spontaneous mutation, which had appeared during the inbreeding, similarly as for example a loss-of-function mutation in pyruvate kinase protecting RC strains AcB55 and AcB61 against malaria, which is absent in both parental strains A/J and C57BL/6 [38].

Strong sex-genotype interaction after infection with L. tropica
Three phenomena related to sex influence on Leishmania infection deserve attention: i) a different sex influence on overall Genetic Influence on Susceptibility to L. tropica www.plosntds.org susceptibility to skin pathology after infection with relatively closely related pathogen species L. tropica and L. major (Figure 2, Table 1), ii) different sex influence on strains' susceptibility to development of skin lesions ( Figure 2) and on parasite numbers in lymph nodes (Figure 3), and iii) sex influence on chemokine levels in serum (Figure 7).
In contrast to L. major infection in CcS/Dem RC strains where males exhibited either higher or similar pathology as females, in L. tropica experiments females were more susceptible to skin pathology than males. However, lymph nodes of females and males of most RC strains do not differ in L. tropica parasite load. The only exceptions are lymph nodes of the strains CcS-5 (and possibly STS), where males exhibit higher numbers of parasites than females and strain CcS-18, where females exhibit higher number of parasites than males (Figure 3). We have also observed a unique transient early peak of serum level of CCL3 and CCL5 in CcS-16 females, but not in CcS-16 males nor in any other strain (see the following section). These data suggest that some genes controlling susceptibility to L. tropica might be sex dependent or alternatively that this sex influence depends on genotype.
Different sex influence on susceptibility to L. mexicana and L. major was observed in DBA/2 mice where females were highly resistant and males susceptible to lesion development after infection with L. mexicana. On the contrary, although both female and male mice developed ulcerating lesions after infection with L. major, lesions healed in males but not in females [39]. Sex influenced liver parasite burdens after intravenous inoculation of L. major in strains BALB/cAnPt, DBA/2N and DBA/2J, males having higher parasite load than females [40].
Genotype influence on sex differences was described in studies of L. major infection [22,41]. No sex differences in susceptibility were observed in BALB/cJ mice, whereas male B10.129(10 M)ScSn mice were relatively resistant to cutaneous disease, while females developed non-healing ulcerative lesions followed by parasites' metastases and death [41] Comparison of L. major susceptibility in two strains, BALB/ cHeA and CcS-11, has shown that there is no significant sex influence on skin lesion development, splenomegaly and hepatomegaly in these strains. Parasite numbers in lymph nodes in males of both strains were higher than in females; however in spleens only CcS-11 but not BALB/c males had higher numbers than females. These observations show that sex affects pathology of various organs differently and that this influence is modified by the host genotype [22].
These results indicate that data obtained with L. tropica (different sex influence on susceptibility to two relatively closely related pathogen species, sex and genotype interaction, and different sex influence on pathology in different organs) reflect a more general phenomenon. Other clear sex biases in incidence of disease, parasite burden, pathology, mortality, and immunological response against various parasites, have been observed in humans and in rodents (reviewed in [42]).
Systemic reactions and a unique pattern of chemokine response in CcS-16 females, but not males of CcS-16 No significant difference was found in IL-4, IL-12, IFNc and GM-CSF levels in serum of infected mice in comparison with noninfected controls (data not shown). This differs from increase of serum levels of IL-4, IFNc and IL-12 observed in CcS/Dem strains after 8 weeks of infection [28]. Loci controlling serum levels of IL-4, IFNc, IL-12, TNFa and IL-6 after 8 weeks of L. major infection are described in [19,21,22]. Similarly as after L. tropica infection, no increase was observed in serum GM-CSF level after infection with L. major (data not shown).
However, the absence of differences in serum levels of IL-4, IL-12, IFNc and GM-CSF after infection does not exclude the possibility that they are involved in the local response to L. tropica. To test this alternative future experiments are needed, similar to those performed to establish the role of Fli1 (Friend leukemia integration 1) in L. major infection model [43].
Infection with L. tropica led to increased serum levels of chemokines CCL2, CCL3 and CCL5. The highest increase was observed in the strains CcS-11, CcS-16, CcS-18, and CcS-20 ( Figure 6, chemokine kinetics in females). The most prominent was the increase of CCL3/MIP-1a. Unexpectedly and in contrast with the other strains tested, the CcS-16 females but not males exhibited a unique pattern of this systemic reaction, characterized by an additional early peak of chemokine levels before the onset of cutaneous disease. It suggests that these early peaks of CCL3 and CCL5 (Figure 7) might be associated with an increased susceptibility of CcS-16 females to L. tropica. However, they could also reflect a stronger, but ineffective response.
CCL3 is produced by a range of cell types, including monocytes/macrophages, lymphocytes, mast cells, basophils, epithelial cells, and fibroblasts. Similarly, expression of CCL5 can be induced in activated T cells, macrophages, fibroblasts, epithelial and endothelial cells, and mesanglial cells [44,45]. Although chemokines evolved to benefit the host, inappropriate regulation or utilization of these proteins can contribute to many diseases [45].
Both CCL3 and CCL5 bind to receptors CCR1, CCR5 and to chemokine decoy receptor D6. CCL5 also binds to CCR3 [45]. Genes ccl3 and ccl5 are situated on mouse chromosome 11; genes ccr1, ccr5 and ccbp2 (D6) are located on mouse chromosome 9 (Table S1). In CcS-16 ccl5 is on a STS-derived segment, whereas the strain of origin of ccl3 is not yet known; ccr1, ccr5 and ccbp2 are on BALB/c-derived segment ( [23] and unpublished data).
The role of CC-chemokines CCL2, CCL3 and CCL5 in leishmaniasis has been tested in a number of studies (reviewed in [46,47]). CCL2 and CCL3 stimulate anti-leishmania response via the induction of NO-mediated regulatory mechanisms to control the intracellular growth and multiplication of L. donovani [48]. CCL2 together with CCL3 also significantly enhanced parasite killing in L. infantum infected human macrophages [49]. In analysis of susceptibility to L. major in mouse, CCL5 contributed to host resistance, but CCL2 alone did not correlate with resistance [50]. In humans, CCL2 expression correlated with self healing cutaneous lesions, whereas CCL3 was associated with lesions of chronic progressive diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. mexicana [51]. These studies indicate that a coordinated interaction of several chemokines is important for successful immune response against Leishmania, but also that the role of different chemokines in defense against various Leishmania ssp. might differ. The observed strain differences and the double peak of CCL3 and CCL5 in CcS-16 females provide a novel potential starting point for investigation of the impact of inter-individual differences in chemokine response on pathogenesis of leishmaniasis.
L. tropica parasites are present in lymph nodes of all strains, but in much lower numbers than in mice infected with L. major In spite of relatively limited pathological symptoms, we found viable parasites in inguinal lymph nodes of all tested strains (Figure 3, 4). In some strains (CcS-3, -18, -20 females, and CcS-20 and BALB/c males) we also observed visceralization of parasites in the spleen ( Figure 5); and in females and males of BALB/c, CcS-3, CcS-11, CcS-16, CcS-18 and CcS-20 we detected parasites in the liver. Similarly as in previous L. major experiments, which mapped genes controlling parasite numbers and demonstrated their distinctness from susceptibility genes [22], our present L. tropica studies confirmed that the extent of the pathological changes in different organs did not directly correlate with parasite load. This was especially obvious in CcS-3 mice, which were resistant to development of skin pathology, but nevertheless contained parasites in lymph nodes, spleen and liver. These data indicate that parasite spread to the different organs and other manifestations of the disease are dependent on the genome of the host. Absence of correlation between parasite load in organs or parasitemia and intensity of disease has been observed also after infection with several other pathogens such as Toxoplasma gondii [52], Trypanosoma brucei brucei [53], Trypanosoma congolense [54], and Plasmodium berghei [55].
In conclusion, the present observation that many of the RC strains tested with the two Leishmania species exhibited different susceptibility to L. major and L. tropica demonstrates existence of species-specific controlling host genes with different functions. Therefore, without combining the two components of variation involved in the outcome of Leishmania infection -genetic variation of the host and species of the parasite -the understanding of the mechanisms of disease will remain incomplete. On the basis of the observed strain differences we will perform linkage analysis of the responsible genes. This information may provide the first step to distinguishing the species-specific from the general genes controlling pathogenesis of leishmaniasis. Figure S1 Parasites in hematoxylin-eosin stained lymph node smears. All tested mice contained viable parasites in their inguinal lymph nodes. Infected BALB/c female (A); noninfected control BALB/c female (B); infected BALB/c male (C); noninfected control BALB/c male (D); infected STS female (E); noninfected control STS female (F); infected STS male (G); noninfected control STS male (H). Parasites are shown with arrows. (TIF) Table S1 ID numbers for genes of chemokines and cytokines. ID numbers of genes, whose products were analyzed in this study, are shown. (DOC)