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Evaluating the anti-leishmania activity of Lucilia sericata and Sarconesiopsis magellanica blowfly larval excretions/secretions in an in vitro model.
Acta Trop. 2018 Jan; 177:44-50.AT

Abstract

Leishmaniasis is a vector-borne disease caused by infection by parasites from the genus Leishmania. Clinical manifestations can be visceral or cutaneous, the latter mainly being chronic ulcers. This work was aimed at evaluating Calliphoridae Lucilia sericata- and Sarconesiopsis magellanica-derived larval excretions and secretions' (ES) in vitro anti-leishmanial activity against Leishmania panamensis. Different larval-ES concentrations from both blowfly species were tested against either L. panamensis promastigotes or intracellular amastigotes using U937-macrophages as host cells. The Alamar Blue method was used for assessing parasite half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) and macrophage cytotoxicity (LC50). The effect of larval-ES on L. panamensis intracellular parasite forms was evaluated by calculating the percentage of infected macrophages, parasite load and toxicity. L. sericata-derived larval-ES L. panamensis macrophage LC50 was 72.57μg/mL (65.35-80.58μg/mL) and promastigote IC50 was 41.44μg/mL (38.57-44.52μg/mL), compared to 34.93μg/mL (31.65-38.55μg/mL) LC50 and 23.42μg/mL (22.48-24.39μg/mL) IC50 for S. magellanica. Microscope evaluation of intracellular parasite forms showed that treatment with 10μg/mL L. sericata ES and 5μg/mL S. magellanica ES led to a decrease in the percentage of infected macrophages and the amount of intracellular amastigotes. This study produced in vitro evidence of the antileishmanial activity of larval ES from both blowfly species on different parasitic stages and showed that the parasite was more susceptible to the ES than it's host cells. The antileishmanial effect on L. panamensis was more evident from S. magellanica ES.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Medical and Forensic Entomology Research Group, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá DC, Colombia; Public Health Department, Medicine Faculty, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá DC, Colombia. Electronic address: juliana_lav1122@hotmail.com.Public Health Department, Medicine Faculty, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá DC, Colombia. Electronic address: mcecheverryg@unal.edu.co.Molecular Biology and Immunology Department, Fundación Instituto de Inmunología de Colombia (FIDIC), Bogotá DC, Colombia; Basic Sciences Department, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá DC, Colombia. Electronic address: mapatarr.fidic@gmail.com.Medical and Forensic Entomology Research Group, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá DC, Colombia; Medicine Faculty, Universidad Antonio Nariño, Bogotá DC, Colombia; Faculty of Agricultural and Livestock Sciences, Universidad de La Salle, Bogotá DC, Colombia. Electronic address: felbello@unisalle.edu.co.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28982577

Citation

Laverde-Paz, Mayra Juliana, et al. "Evaluating the Anti-leishmania Activity of Lucilia Sericata and Sarconesiopsis Magellanica Blowfly Larval Excretions/secretions in an in Vitro Model." Acta Tropica, vol. 177, 2018, pp. 44-50.
Laverde-Paz MJ, Echeverry MC, Patarroyo MA, et al. Evaluating the anti-leishmania activity of Lucilia sericata and Sarconesiopsis magellanica blowfly larval excretions/secretions in an in vitro model. Acta Trop. 2018;177:44-50.
Laverde-Paz, M. J., Echeverry, M. C., Patarroyo, M. A., & Bello, F. J. (2018). Evaluating the anti-leishmania activity of Lucilia sericata and Sarconesiopsis magellanica blowfly larval excretions/secretions in an in vitro model. Acta Tropica, 177, 44-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actatropica.2017.09.033
Laverde-Paz MJ, et al. Evaluating the Anti-leishmania Activity of Lucilia Sericata and Sarconesiopsis Magellanica Blowfly Larval Excretions/secretions in an in Vitro Model. Acta Trop. 2018;177:44-50. PubMed PMID: 28982577.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Evaluating the anti-leishmania activity of Lucilia sericata and Sarconesiopsis magellanica blowfly larval excretions/secretions in an in vitro model. AU - Laverde-Paz,Mayra Juliana, AU - Echeverry,María Clara, AU - Patarroyo,Manuel Alfonso, AU - Bello,Felio Jesús, Y1 - 2017/10/02/ PY - 2017/06/15/received PY - 2017/09/29/revised PY - 2017/09/30/accepted PY - 2017/10/7/pubmed PY - 2018/5/8/medline PY - 2017/10/7/entrez KW - IC(50) KW - Larval excretion/secretion KW - Leishmania panamensis KW - Lucilia sericata KW - Sarconesiopsis magellanica KW - U937 SP - 44 EP - 50 JF - Acta tropica JO - Acta Trop VL - 177 N2 - Leishmaniasis is a vector-borne disease caused by infection by parasites from the genus Leishmania. Clinical manifestations can be visceral or cutaneous, the latter mainly being chronic ulcers. This work was aimed at evaluating Calliphoridae Lucilia sericata- and Sarconesiopsis magellanica-derived larval excretions and secretions' (ES) in vitro anti-leishmanial activity against Leishmania panamensis. Different larval-ES concentrations from both blowfly species were tested against either L. panamensis promastigotes or intracellular amastigotes using U937-macrophages as host cells. The Alamar Blue method was used for assessing parasite half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) and macrophage cytotoxicity (LC50). The effect of larval-ES on L. panamensis intracellular parasite forms was evaluated by calculating the percentage of infected macrophages, parasite load and toxicity. L. sericata-derived larval-ES L. panamensis macrophage LC50 was 72.57μg/mL (65.35-80.58μg/mL) and promastigote IC50 was 41.44μg/mL (38.57-44.52μg/mL), compared to 34.93μg/mL (31.65-38.55μg/mL) LC50 and 23.42μg/mL (22.48-24.39μg/mL) IC50 for S. magellanica. Microscope evaluation of intracellular parasite forms showed that treatment with 10μg/mL L. sericata ES and 5μg/mL S. magellanica ES led to a decrease in the percentage of infected macrophages and the amount of intracellular amastigotes. This study produced in vitro evidence of the antileishmanial activity of larval ES from both blowfly species on different parasitic stages and showed that the parasite was more susceptible to the ES than it's host cells. The antileishmanial effect on L. panamensis was more evident from S. magellanica ES. SN - 1873-6254 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28982577/Evaluating_the_anti_leishmania_activity_of_Lucilia_sericata_and_Sarconesiopsis_magellanica_blowfly_larval_excretions/secretions_in_an_in_vitro_model_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -