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Featured researches published by Joanna Kubar.


BMC Microbiology | 2001

In vivo involvement of polymorphonuclear neutrophils in Leishmania infantum infection

Déborah Rousseau; Sylvie Demartino; Bernard Ferrua; Jean François Michiels; Fabienne Anjuère; Konstantina Fragaki; Yves Le Fichoux; Joanna Kubar

BackgroundThe role of lymphocytes in the specific defence against L. infantum has been well established, but the part played by polynuclear neutrophil (PN) cells in controlling visceral leishmaniasis was much less studied. In this report we examine in vivo the participation of PN in early and late phases of infection by L. infantum.ResultsPromastigote phagocytosis and killing occurs very early after infection, as demonstrated by electron microscopy analyses which show in BALB/c mouse spleen, but not in liver, numerous PN harbouring ultrastructurally degraded parasites. It is shown, using mAb RB6-8C5 directed against mature mouse granulocytes, that in chronically infected mice, long-term PN depletion did not enhance parasite counts neither in liver nor in spleen, indicating that these cells are not involved in the late phase of L. infantum infection. In acute stage of infection, in mouse liver, where L. infantum load is initially larger than that in spleen but resolves spontaneously, there was no significant effect of neutrophils depletion. By contrast, early in infection the neutrophil cells crucially contributed to parasite killing in spleen, since PN depletion, performed before and up to 7 days after the parasite inoculation, resulted in a ten-fold increase of parasite burden.ConclusionsTaken together these data show that neutrophil cells contribute to the early control of the parasite growth in spleen but not in liver and that these cells have no significant effect late in infection in either of these target organs.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1995

Detection by Western blot of four antigens characterizing acute clinical leishmaniasis due to Leishmania infantum

P. Marty; Alain Lelièvre; Jean-François Quaranta; Isabelle Suffia; Maria Eulalio; M. Gari-Toussaint; Yves Le Fichoux; Joanna Kubar

Western blot analysis of sera from 32 patients with acute clinical leishmaniasis due to Leishmania infantum showed the simultaneous presence of antibodies against 4 antigens with molecular masses of 18, 21, 23, 31 kDa. The simultaneous presence of these 4 antigens was specific to the clinical disease and it was not detected in 47 sera from asymptomatic individuals living in the leishmaniasis endemic area of Alpes-Maritimes (southern France) or in 37 sera from patients with other protozoan infections.


Vaccine | 2001

Immunisation with DNA encoding Leishmania infantum protein papLe22 decreases the frequency of parasitemic episodes in infected hamsters.

Konstantina Fragaki; Isabelle Suffia; Bernard Ferrua; Déborah Rousseau; Yves Le Fichoux; Joanna Kubar

We tested in outbred golden hamsters the protective potential of highly immunogenic Leishmania infantum protein papLe22 which we recently identified. Immunisation was performed using papLe22 cDNA, administered as a single intramuscular injection. The level of antibodies directed against total leishmanial antigens was significantly decreased in the vaccinated hamsters as compared with the controls, indicating that the administration of papLe22 cDNA downregulated the Th2 type response and suggesting that the immune response was reoriented toward the cell-mediated type. The presence of the parasite kDNA in the peripheral blood was systematically detected as early as 3 weeks post infection in all mock-vaccinated hamsters. By contrast, in the vaccinated animals the occurrence of the episodes of Leishmania circulation was reduced by 50%. The immunisation presenting efficacy in this highly susceptible species which develop VL similar in gravity to human and canine disease should prove also efficient in naturally infected hosts. The marked decrease of the frequency of parasite circulation induced by papLe22 cDNA immunisation appears therefore important and potentially able to reduce transmission and thus to control the spread of the disease.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2008

Presence of anti-Lepp12 antibody: a marker for diagnostic and prognostic evaluation of visceral leishmaniasis

Dhiraj Kumar; Gurumurthy Srividya; Sandeep Verma; Ruchi Singh; Narendra Singh Negi; Konstantina Fragaki; Joanna Kubar; Poonam Salotra

The diagnostic potential of recombinant Lepp12 (rLepp12) antigen cloned from Leishmania infantum was assessed in L. donovani infections by Western blotting. Ninety-two serum samples, including 30 patients with active kala-azar (KA), 17 post-treated KA patients (KA-PT), 20 post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) patients and 25 controls, were analysed for rLepp12, rK39 and DAT positivity. All KA samples taken at pre-treatment stage were positive for Lepp12 antibodies. Seventeen of these were evaluated post treatment (KA-PT), 10 of which were found to be negative. Nine of these 10 negative cases corresponded to clinically cured patients with regressed spleen. Seven post-treatment cases were rLepp12-positive; all of them corresponded to patients who were considered clinically cured but continued to have an enlarged spleen (> or =5 cm). The majority of PKDL patients (18/20) were found to be seronegative by immunoblot test using rLepp12 antigen. The rLepp12-based Western blot diagnosed 100% of patients with visceral disease, whilst none of the control cases were found to be reactive to rLepp12. rLepp12 protein provides a useful reagent for highly sensitive and specific diagnosis of KA. Additionally, rLepp12 appears to have potential as a prognostic marker for the infection.


BMC Microbiology | 2003

A novel Leishmania infantum nuclear phosphoprotein Lepp12 which stimulates IL1-beta synthesis in THP-1 transfectants.

Konstantina Fragaki; Bernard Ferrua; Baharia Mograbi; Julie Waldispühl; Joanna Kubar

BackgroundWe report cloning and characterization of a novel Leishmania infantum protein which we termed Lepp12, and we examine its possible implication in the interference with intramacrophage signaling pathways.ResultsThe protein Lepp12 contains 87 amino acid sequence and exhibits 5 potential phosphorylation sites by protein kinase C (PKC). Recombinant GST-Lepp12 is phosphorylated in vitro by exogenous PKC and by PKC-like activities present in promastigote and in the myelomonocytic THP-1 cell line, indicating that at least one phosphorylation site is functional on the recombinant Lepp12. The natural Lepp12 protein is present in L. infantum promastigotes, as evidenced using specific anti-Lepp12 antibodies produced by immunopurification from acute phase VL patient sera. Interestingly, human patient sera are strongly reactive with GST-Lepp12, demonstrating immunogenic properties of Lepp12 in man, but no immune response to Lepp12 is detectable in experimentally infected animals. When isolated from promastigotes, Lepp12 migrates as two species of apparent MW of 18.3 kDa (major) and 14 kDa (minor), localizes in the nuclear fraction and appears constitutively phosphorylated. Natural Lepp12 is phosphorylable in vitro by both exogenous PKC and PKC-like activity present in THP-1 extracts. The intracellular Lepp12 transfected into THP-1 cells activates these cells to produce IL-1beta and induces an enhancing effect on PMA stimulated IL-1beta synthesis, as demonstrated using GST-Lepp12 transfectants.ConclusionsTogether these results indicate that Lepp12 represents a substrate for PKC or other PKC-like activities present in the promastigote form and the host cell and therefore may interfere with signal transduction pathways involving PKC.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1994

Measurement of the anti-HIV agent 2′,3′-didehydro-2′,3′-dideoxythymidine (D4T) by competitive ELISA

Bernard Ferrua; Thanh Thu Tran; Jean François Quaranta; Joanna Kubar; Clotilde Roptin; Roger Condom; Jacques Durant; Roger Guedj

Abstract 2′,3′-didehydro-2′,3′-dideoxythymidine (D4T) is a thymidine analogue with potent anti-HIV activity in vitro and is currently being investigated therapeutically in patients with advanced HIV infection. We describe a first one-step competitive ELISA method developed for D4T measurement. Anti-D4T rabbit antibodies were raised against a D4T hemisuccinate-bovine serum albumin immunogen. A D4T-hemisuccinate-horseradish peroxidase conjugate and a monoclonal anti-rabbit IgG antibody insolubilized onto a microtiter plate were used as a tracer and capture system, respectively. The method was capable of detecting 2 ng/ml of D4T in cell cultures and 20 ng/ml of D4T in plasma samples previously separated in microconcentrator devices. Cross-reactivit y analysis showed that thymidine, D4T monophosphate, or azidothymidine, were weakly recognized by the ELISA and that thymine or other nucleosides were unreactive. The test was successfully used for the quantification of D4T in cell extracts from CEM or Molt 4 cell lines cultured with D4T and in the plasma of patients with advanced HIV infection, receiving D4T therapy. Moreover this ELISA could be used for the indirect quantification of D4T phosphorylated intracellular metabolites previously separated by reverse phase HPLC and hydrolyzed with alkaline phosphatase.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1999

Occurrence of Leishmania infantum Parasitemia in Asymptomatic Blood Donors Living in an Area of Endemicity in Southern France

Yves Le Fichoux; Jean-François Quaranta; Jean-Pierre Aufeuvre; Alain Lelièvre; P. Marty; Isabelle Suffia; D. Rousseau; Joanna Kubar


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1998

Short- and Long-Term Efficacy of Hexadecylphosphocholine against Established Leishmania infantum Infection in BALB/c Mice

Yves Le Fichoux; D. Rousseau; Bernard Ferrua; Sandrine Ruette; Alain Lelièvre; Dominique Grousson; Joanna Kubar


Nature Medicine | 1997

Transmission of L. infantum by blood donors

Joanna Kubar; Jean-François Quaranta; Pierre Marty; Alain Lelièvre; Yves Le Fichoux; Jean-Pierre Aufeuvre


European Cytokine Network | 2001

Sustained parasite burden in the spleen of Leishmania infantum-infected BALB/c mice is accompanied by expression of MCP-1 transcripts and lack of protection against challenge

D. Rousseau; S. Demartino; Fabienne Anjuère; Bernard Ferrua; Konstantina Fragaki; Y. Le Fichoux; Joanna Kubar

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Isabelle Suffia

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Alain Lelièvre

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Yves Le Fichoux

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Jean-François Quaranta

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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P. Marty

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Baharia Mograbi

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Narendra Singh Negi

Vardhman Mahavir Medical College

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