PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Mycobacterium indicus pranii (Mw) re-establishes host protective immune response in Leishmania donovani infected macrophages: critical role of IL-12.

  • Anupam Adhikari,
  • Gaurav Gupta,
  • Saikat Majumder,
  • Sayantan Banerjee,
  • Surajit Bhattacharjee,
  • Parna Bhattacharya,
  • Sangeeta Kumari,
  • Subhadra Haldar,
  • Suchandra Bhattacharyya Majumdar,
  • Bhaskar Saha,
  • Subrata Majumdar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040265
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e40265

Abstract

Read online

Leishmania donovani, a protozoan parasite, causes a strong immunosuppression in a susceptible host and inflicts the fatal disease visceral leishmaniasis. Relatively high toxicity, low therapeutic index, and failure in reinstating host-protective anti-leishmanial immune responses have made anti-leishmanial drugs patient non-compliant and an immuno-modulatory treatment a necessity. Therefore, we have tested the anti-leishmanial efficacy of a combination of a novel immunomodulator, Mycobacterium indicus pranii (Mw), and an anti-leishmanial drug, Amphotericin B (AmpB). We observe that Mw alone or with a suboptimal dose of AmpB offers significant protection against L. donovani infection by activating the macrophages. Our experiments examining the anti-leishmanial activity of Mw alone or with AmpB also indicate a p38MAPK and ERK-1/2 regulated pro-inflammatory responses. The Mw-AmpB combination induced nitric oxide production, restored Th1 response, and significantly reduced parasite burden in wild type macrophages but not in IL-12-deficient macrophages indicating a pivotal role for IL-12 in the induction of host-protection by Mw and AmpB treatments. In addition, we observed that Mw alone or in combination with suboptimal dose of AmpB render protection against L. donovani infection in susceptible BALB/c mice. However, these treatments failed to render protection in IL-12-deficient mice in vivo which added further support that IL-12 played a central role in this chemo immunotherapeutic approach. Thus, we demonstrate a novel chemo-immunotherapeutic approach- Mw and AmpB crosstalk eliminating the parasite-induced immunosuppression and inducing collateral host-protective effects.