Evaluation of the Four IgG Subclasses in Symptomatic Dogs with Leishmania Sp. and in Dogs Vaccinated Against Visceral Leishmaniasis
World Small Animal Veterinary Association World Congress Proceedings, 2009
F.A. Ikeda-Garcia; V.M.F. Lima; M.D. Laurenti; M.J. Day; F.A. Rosa; A.A.D. Gomes; L.S.V. Sobrinho; J.P. Vides; M. Marcondes
Araçatuba, Brazil

Introduction

With the introduction of a vaccine against canine leishmaniasis in Brazil, customary serological tests fail in differentiate a dog showing symptoms of the disease from a vaccinated one that is not healthy. In case of development of any symptom of the disease in the latter, visceral leishmaniasis must be included in the differential diagnosis, since the vaccine does not give a 100% immunity and the animal may have been vaccinated after infection and before seroconversion. Several studies with two IgG subclasses (IgG1 and IgG2) have been performed in order to determine whether their response can be used as a marker of the resistance or susceptibility to visceral leishmaniasis, so that the treatment's efficacy can be assessed and vaccinated dogs can be differentiated from sick ones (Deplazes et al. 1995, Bourdoiseau et al. 1997, Cavaliero et al. 1999, Nieto et al. 1999, Boceta et al. 2000, Solano-Gallego et al. 2000, Leandro et al. 2001, Solano-Gallego et al. 2001, Cordeiro Da Silva et al. 2003, Mendes et al. 2003, Almeida et al. 2005, Iniesta et al. 2005, Reis et al. 2006, Cardoso et al. 2007, Da Costa-Val et al. 2007, Iniesta et al. 2007, Rodríguez-Cortés et al. 2007a). However, the results are very conflicting. According to Day (2007), it is clear that there is no consistent pattern related to a correlation between IgG1 or IgG2 and symptomatic or asymptomatic status in canine visceral leishmaniasis. In this light, the purpose of the present study was determine the profile of four IgG subclasses (IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4) in asymptomatic dogs naturally infected with Leishmania chagasi and in dogs vaccinated against visceral leishmaniasis, in an attempt to differentiate serologically both animal groups.

Materials and Methods

Three groups of dogs from both sexes, several breeds and ages were used. The first group was composed of 45 clinically healthy animals, coming from nonendemic areas for visceral leishmaniasis (control), the second was composed of 45 symptomatic dogs with visceral leishmaniasis and the third was composed of 37 clinically healthy dogs which had been vaccinated against canine visceral leishmaniasis. The sample collection from animals of the third group happened in two moments: before the application of the first vaccine dose and 90 days after the application of the first vaccine dose, when the total IgG results indicated that seroconversion had already happened. The presence of anti-Leishmania chagasi IgG in serum was determined by the ELISA technique, as described by Lima et al. (2003). The presence of IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4 in serum was determined by the ELISA technique, as described by Quinnell et al. (2003). The ELISA technique's cutoff determination was performed by using the sera from healthy dogs from a non-endemic area for the disease. To serve the purpose, it was considered the group mean added of three standard deviations. Therefore, the cutoffs used for the total anti-Leishmania chagasi IgG detection, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4 were 0.218; 0.110; 0.202; 0.088 and 0.041, respectively.

Results

The results of this study verified that 90 days after the application of the first vaccine dose all analyzed variables (total IgG, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4) showed statistically significant differences in relation to the initial moment. Despite the increase of all studied subclasses, IgG2 had median values below cutoff (0.166), even after seroconversion. The most stimulated classes after vaccination were IgG1 (from 0.044 to 0.813), IgG3 (from 0.027 to 0.497) and lastly IgG4 (from 0.015 to 0.138). Statistically significant differences between symptomatic and vaccinated dogs were observed, considering total IgG, IgG1, IgG3 and IgG4 in the two dog groups. The median values were 1.162 and 0.754 for total IgG; 1.677 and 0.813 for IgG1; 1.242 and 0.497 for IgG3; and 0.431 and 0.138 for IgG4, respectively, in symptomatic and vaccinated dogs. The optical density medians of IgG2 in symptomatic dogs and in vaccinated dogs did not show statistically significant differences, being 0.206 and 0.166, respectively.

Discussion and Conclusions

Despite statistically significant differences were observed between vaccinated dogs and symptomatic animals regarding total IgG, IgG1, IgG3 and IgG4, the values raised above the respective cutoffs in both dog groups. Therefore, it was not possible to differentiate a vaccinated dog having symptoms of any other disease from an animal naturally infected with Leishmania chagasi with symptoms of the disease. IgG2 could not be differentiated among groups either, since the optical density medians of symptomatic and vaccinated dogs do not show statistically significant differences. In this study, IgG1 showed a higher stimulation than IgG2, both in symptomatic dogs and vaccinated animals, thus disagreeing with the results of Mendes et al. (2003), who described, while working with polyclonal antibodies, that the IgG1 increase is associated to a natural infection, whereas the IgG2 is associated to vaccination. In vaccinated animals, the predominant subclass was IgG1, followed by IgG3, IgG2 and finally IgG4. In animals whose clinical picture was due to visceral leishmaniasis, the predominant subclass was IgG1, followed by IgG3, IgG4 and IgG2, corroborating the findings of Quinnell et al. (2003), in studies of symptomatic dogs with visceral leishmaniasis. The results obtained in this study's conditions led to the conclusion that the evaluation of the four IgG subclasses does not differentiate dogs vaccinated against visceral leishmaniasis from dogs naturally infected and bearing a clinical status of the disease.

References

1.  Deplazes P, Smith NC, Arnold P, Lutz H, Eckert J. Specific IgG1 and IgG2 antibody responses of dogs to Leishmania infantum and others parasites. Parasite Immunology, v.17, n.9, p.451-458, 1995.

2.  Bourdoiseau G, Bonnefont C, Hoareau E, Boehringer C, Stolle T, Chabanne L. Specific IgG1 and IgG2 antibody and lymphocyte subset levels in naturally Leishmania infantum-infected treated and untreated dogs. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.59, n.1-2, p.21-30, 1997.

3.  Cavaliero T, Arnold P, Mathis A, Glaus T, Hofmann-Lehmann R, Deplazes P. Clinical, serologic, and parasitologic follow-up after long-term allopurinol therapy of dogs naturally infected with Leishmania infantum. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, v.13, n.4, p.330-334, 1999.

4.  Nieto CG, García-Alonso M, Requena JM, Mirón C, Soto M, Alonso C, Navarrete I. Analysis of the humoral immune response against total and recombinant antigens of Leishmania infantum: Correlation with disease progression in canine experimental leishmaniasis. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.67, n.2, p.117-130, 1999.

5.  Boceta C, Alonso C, Jiménez-Ruiz A. Leucine rich repeats are the main epitopes in Leishmania infantum PSA during canine and human visceral leishmaniasis. Parasite Immunology, v.22, n.2, p.55-62, 2000.

6.  Solano-Gallego L, Liull J, Ramos G, Riera C, Arboix M, Alberola J, Ferrer L. The Ibizan hound presents a predominantly cellular immune response against natural Leishmania infection. Veterinary Parasitology, v.90, n.1-2, p.37-45, 2000.

7.  Solano-Gallego L, Riera C, Roura X, Iniesta L, Gallego M, Valladares JE, Fisa R, Castillejo S, Alberola J, Ferrer L, Arboix M, Port's M. Leishmania infantum-specific IgG, IgG1 and IgG2 antibody responses in healthy and ill dogs from endemic areas Evolution in the course of infection and after treatment. Veterinary Parasitology, v.96, n.4, p.265-276, 2001.

8.  Leandro C, Santos-Gomes GM, Campino L, Romão P, Cortes S, Rolão N, Gomes-Pereira S, Riça Capela MJ, Abranches P. Cell mediated immunity and specific IgG1 and IgG2 antibody response in natural and experimental canine leishmaniosis. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.79, n.34, p.273-284, 2001.

9.  Cordeiro-Da-Silva A, Cardoso L, Araújo N, Castro H, Tomás A, Rodrigues M, Cabral M, Vergnes B, Sereno D, Ouaissi A. Identification of antibodies to Leishmania silent information regulatory 2 (SIR2) protein homologue during canine natural infections: pathological implications. Immunology Letters, v.86, n.2, p.155-162, 2003.

10. Mendes CO, De Souza EP, Borja-Cabrera GP, Batista LMM, Dos Santos MA, Parra LE, Menz I, Palatnik M, De Sousa CBP. IgG1/IgG2 antibody dichotomy in sera of vaccinated or naturally infected dogs with visceral leishmaniosis. Vaccine, v.21, n.19-20, p.2589-2597, 2003.

11. Almeida MAO, Jesus EEV, Sousa-Atta MLB, Alves LC, Berne MEA, Atta AM. Antileishmanial antibody profile in dogs naturally infected with Leishmania chagasi. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.106, n.1-2, p.151-58, 2005.

12. Iniesta L, Gállego M, Port's M. Immunoglobulin G and E responses in various stages of canine leishmaniosis. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.103, n.1-2, p.77-81, 2005.

13. Iniesta L, Gállego M, Port's M. Idiotype expression of IgG1 and IgG2 in dogs naturally infected with Leishmania infantum. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.119, n.3-4, p.189-197, 2007.

14. Reis AB, Teixeira-Carvalho A, Vale AM, Marques MJ, Giunchetti RC, Mayrink W, Guerra LL, Andrade RA, Côrrea-Oliveira R, Martins-Filho OA. Isotype patterns of immunoglobulins: Hallmarks for clinical status and tissue parasite density in Brazilian dogs naturally infected by Leishmania (Leishmania) chagasi. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.112, n.3-4, p.102116, 2006.

15. Cardoso L, Schallig HDFH, Cordeiro-Da-Silva A, Cabral M, Alunda JNM, Rodrigues M. Anti-Leishmania humoral and cellular immune responses in naturally infected symptomatic and asymptomatic dogs. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.117, n.1-2, p.35-41, 2007.

16. Da Costa-Val AP, Cavalcanti RR, Gontijo NF, Michalick MSM, Alexander B, Williams P, Melo MN. Canine visceral leishmaniasis: relationships between clinical status, humoral immune response, hematology and Lutzomyia (Lutzomyia) longipalpis infectivity. The Veterinary Journal, v.174, n.3, p.636643, 2007.

17. Rodríguez-Cortés A, Fernández-Bellón H, Ramis A, Ferrer L, Alberola J, Solano-Gallego L. Leishmania-specific isotype levels and their relationship with specific cell-mediated immunity parameters in canine leishmaniasis. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.116, n.3-4, p.190-198, 2007.

18. Day MJ. Immunoglobulin G subclass distribution in canine leishmaniosis: A review and analysis of pitfalls in interpretation. Veterinary Parasitology, v. 147, n.1-2, p. 2-8, 2007.

19. Lima VMF, Gonçalves ME, Ikeda FA, Luvizotto MCR, Feitosa MM. Anti-Leishmania antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid from dogs with visceral leishmaniasis. Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, v.36, n.4, p.485-489, 2003.

20. Quinnell RJ, Courtenay O, Garcez LM, Kaye PM, Shaw MA, Dye C, Day MJ. IgG subclass responses in a longitudinal study of canine visceral leishmaniasis. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, v.91, n.2, p.161-168, 2003.

 

Speaker Information
(click the speaker's name to view other papers and abstracts submitted by this speaker)

F.A. Ikeda-Garcia
Araçatuba, Brazil


SAID=27