Publications by authors named "Ises A Abrahamsohn"

The aim of this study was to characterize clinical field isolates of Leishmania spp. obtained from patients with American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis (ATL) who live in Goiás state, Brazil. The presumed areas of infection were in Goiás, Tocantins, and Pará states.

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Plasmodium chabaudi infection induces a rapid and intense splenic CD4(+) T cell response that contributes to both disease pathogenesis and the control of acute parasitemia. The subsequent development of clinical immunity to disease occurs concomitantly with the persistence of low levels of chronic parasitemia. The suppressive activity of regulatory T (T(reg)) cells has been implicated in both development of clinical immunity and parasite persistence.

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Lesion development in tegumentary leishmaniasis is markedly influenced by the inoculation site and the type and number of injected infective forms. This and the yet unclear contribution of Th2 cytokines as susceptibility factors to Leishmania amazonensis infection prompted us to investigate the roles of IL-4, IL-13 and IL-10 on C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice infected in the footpad (paw) or rump with low-dose L. amazonensis purified-metacyclics.

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The participation of type I IFNs (IFN-I) in NO production and resistance to Trypanosoma cruzi infection was investigated. Adherent cells obtained from the peritoneal cavity of mice infected by the i.p.

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IL-12 is one of the main cytokines driving the immune response to a resistant phenotype in leishmaniasis and in several other diseases involving intracellular microbes. In this study, we investigated IL-12 production by mononuclear phagocytes at several developmental stages when stimulated with Leishmania major, L. amazonensis or L.

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Trypanosoma cruzi is an intracellular parasite that induces a strong Th1-type response and immunosuppression during the acute phase of infection. To study how the infection with T. cruzi would modulate the development of an autoimmune disease, we immunized C57BL/6 mice and IL-10 or iNOS knock-out mice of the same background with the encephalitogenic MOG 35-55 peptide and infected them with T.

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In the search to identify differences in the immunological response between patients with the indeterminate or cardiac form of Chagas disease, trypomastigote-specific peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) proliferative responses were studied. Suppression of lymphoproliferation occurred in both groups of patients, being more intense in those with the cardiac form. By adding to the cultures neutralizing mAbs anti-IFN-gamma, anti-IL-4, anti-IL-13, or anti-IL-10, indomethacin to block prostaglandin synthesis, NMMA as inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis, or glutathione-peroxidase as H(2)O(2) scavenger, it was found that indomethacin augmented lymphoproliferation in both groups of patients.

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The pure delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction obtained in 4-day ovalbumin-sensitized mice after antigen challenge in the footpad was abrogated by transfer of in vitro expanded, antigen-specific lymphoblasts derived from ovalbumin-hyperimmunized donors (high antibody producers), 12 h before immunization. This effect was specific inasmuch as Trypanosoma cruzi-specific blasts derived from Tc-Ag-hyperimmunized mice did not inhibit delayed-type hypersensitivity in ovalbumin-immunized recipients. The ovalbumin-specific blasts displayed a Th2 cytokine profile, secreting IL-4 and IL-10 upon restimulation in vitro with ovalbumin, but not IFN-gamma or IL-2.

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