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Dive into the research topics where Laura Corvo is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura Corvo.


Parasites & Vectors | 2014

Cross-protective effect of a combined L5 plus L3 Leishmania major ribosomal protein based vaccine combined with a Th1 adjuvant in murine cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis

Laura Ramírez; Laura Corvo; Mariana C. Duarte; Miguel A. Chávez-Fumagalli; Diogo G. Valadares; Diego M. Santos; Camila I. de Oliveira; Marta R. Escutia; Carlos Alonso; Pedro Bonay; Carlos Ap Tavares; Eduardo Af Coelho; Manuel Soto

BackgroundTwo Leishmania major ribosomal proteins L3 (LmL3) and L5 (LmL5) have been described as protective molecules against cutaneous leishmaniasis due to infection with L. major and Leishmania braziliensis in BALB/c mice when immunized with a Th1 adjuvant (non-methylated CpG-oligodeoxynucleotides; CpG-ODN). In the present study we analyzed the cross-protective efficacy of an LmL3-LmL5-CpG ODN combined vaccine against infection with Leishmania amazonensis and Leishmania chagasi (syn. Leishmania infantum) the etiologic agents of different clinical forms of human leishmaniasis in South America.MethodsThe combined vaccine was administered subcutaneously to BALB/c mice. After immunization the cellular and humoral responses elicited were analyzed. Mice were independently challenged with L. amazonensis and L. chagasi. The size of the cutaneous lesions caused by the infection with the first species, the parasite loads and the immune response in both infection models were analyzed nine weeks after challenge.ResultsMice vaccinated with the combined vaccine showed a Th1-like response against LmL3 and LmL5. Vaccinated mice were able to delay lesion development due to L. amazonensis infection and to control parasite loads in the site of infection. A reduction of the parasite burden in the lymph nodes draining the site of infection and in the liver and spleen was observed in the vaccinated mice after a subcutaneous infection with L. chagasi. In both models of infection, protection was correlated to parasite antigen-specific production of IFN-γ and down-regulation of parasite-mediated IL-4 and IL-10 responses.ConclusionsThe data presented here demonstrate the potential use of L. major L3 and L5 recombinant ribosomal proteins for the development of vaccines against various Leishmania species.


Scholarly Research Exchange | 2009

Searching Genes Encoding Leishmania Antigens for Diagnosis and Protection

Manuel Soto; Laura Ram; Miguel A. Pineda; Victor M. Gonz; Petter F. Entringer; Ivan P. Nascimento; Ana Paula Souza; Laura Corvo; Carlos Alonso; Pedro Bonay; Cláudia Brodskyn; Aldina Barral; Manoel Barral-Netto; Salvador Iborra

Leishmaniases are a wide spectrum of parasitic diseases caused by the infection of different species of the genus Leishmania. Currently, these diseases are one of the most neglected diseases threatening 350 million people in different countries around the world. Thus, these diseases require better screening, diagnostics and treatment. An effective vaccine, that is not currently available, would be the best way to confront leishmaniases. In the past 20 years the molecular characterization of Leishmania genes encoding parasite antigens has been carried out. In this review we summarize the most common strategies employed for the isolation and characterization of genes encoding Leishmania antigens. To provide a collective view, we also discuss the results related with diagnosis and protection based on different recombinant DNA-derived Leishmania products.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Coadministration of the Three Antigenic Leishmania infantum Poly (A) Binding Proteins as a DNA Vaccine Induces Protection against Leishmania major Infection in BALB/c Mice

Manuel Soto; Laura Corvo; Esther Garde; Laura Ramírez; Virginia Iniesta; Pedro Bonay; Carlos Gómez-Nieto; Victor Gonzalez; M. Elena Martín; Carlos Alonso; Eduardo Antonio Ferraz Coelho; Aldina Barral; Manoel Barral-Netto; Salvador Iborra

Background Highly conserved intracellular proteins from Leishmania have been described as antigens in natural and experimental infected mammals. The present study aimed to evaluate the antigenicity and prophylactic properties of the Leishmania infantum Poly (A) binding proteins (LiPABPs). Methodology/Principal Findings Three different members of the LiPABP family have been described. Recombinant tools based on these proteins were constructed: recombinant proteins and DNA vaccines. The three recombinant proteins were employed for coating ELISA plates. Sera from human and canine patients of visceral leishmaniasis and human patients of mucosal leishmaniasis recognized the three LiPABPs. In addition, the protective efficacy of a DNA vaccine based on the combination of the three Leishmania PABPs has been tested in a model of progressive murine leishmaniasis: BALB/c mice infected with Leishmania major. The induction of a Th1-like response against the LiPABP family by genetic vaccination was able to down-regulate the IL-10 predominant responses elicited by parasite LiPABPs after infection in this murine model. This modulation resulted in a partial protection against L. major infection. LiPABP vaccinated mice showed a reduction on the pathology that was accompanied by a decrease in parasite burdens, in antibody titers against Leishmania antigens and in the IL-4 and IL-10 parasite-specific mediated responses in comparison to control mice groups immunized with saline or with the non-recombinant plasmid. Conclusion/Significance The results presented here demonstrate for the first time the prophylactic properties of a new family of Leishmania antigenic intracellular proteins, the LiPABPs. The redirection of the immune response elicited against the LiPABP family (from IL-10 towards IFN-γ mediated responses) by genetic vaccination was able to induce a partial protection against the development of the disease in a highly susceptible murine model of leishmaniasis.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Differential Trypanocidal Activity of Novel Macrolide Antibiotics; Correlation to Genetic Lineage

Carolina Aquilino; Maria Luisa Gonzalez Rubio; Elena M. Seco; Leticia Escudero; Laura Corvo; Manuel Soto; Manuel Fresno; Francisco Malpartida; Pedro Bonay

Here we report the systematic study of the anti-trypanocidal activity of some new products derived from S. diastatus on 14 different T. cruzi strains spanning the six genetic lineages of T. cruzi. As the traditional growth inhibition curves giving similar IC50 showed great differences on antibiotic and lineage tested, we decided to preserve the wealth of information derived from each inhibition curve and used an algorithm related to potency of the drugs, combined in a matrix data set used to generate a cluster tree. The cluster thus generated based just on drug susceptibility data closely resembles the phylogenies of the lineages derived from genetic data and provides a novel approach to correlate genetic data with phenotypes related to pathogenesis of Chagas disease. Furthermore we provide clues on the drugs mechanism of action.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2017

Vaccination with a Leishmania infantum HSP70-II null mutant confers long-term protective immunity against Leishmania major infection in two mice models

José Carlos Solana; Laura Ramírez; Laura Corvo; Manoel Barral-Netto; Jose M. Requena; Salvador Iborra; Manuel Soto

Background The immunization with genetically attenuated Leishmania cell lines has been associated to the induction of memory and effector T cell responses against Leishmania able to control subsequent challenges. A Leishmania infantum null mutant for the HSP70-II genes has been described, possessing a non-virulent phenotype. Methodology/Principal findings The L. infantum attenuated parasites (LiΔHSP70-II) were inoculated in BALB/c (intravenously and subcutaneously) and C57BL/6 (subcutaneously) mice. An asymptomatic infection was generated and parasites diminished progressively to become undetectable in most of the analyzed organs. However, inoculation resulted in the long-term induction of parasite specific IFN-γ responses able to control the disease caused by a challenge of L. major infective promastigotes. BALB/c susceptible mice showed very low lesion development and a drastic decrease in parasite burdens in the lymph nodes draining the site of infection and internal organs. C57BL/6 mice did not show clinical manifestation of disease, correlated to the rapid migration of Leishmania specific IFN-γ producing T cells to the site of infection. Conclusion/Significance Inoculation of the LiΔHSP70-II attenuated line activates mammalian immune system for inducing moderate pro-inflammatory responses. These responses are able to confer long-term protection in mice against the infection of L. major virulent parasites.


Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology | 2018

Analysis of the Antigenic and Prophylactic Properties of the Leishmania Translation Initiation Factors eIF2 and eIF2B in Natural and Experimental Leishmaniasis

Esther Garde; Laura Ramírez; Laura Corvo; José Carlos Solana; M. Elena Martín; Victor Gonzalez; Carlos Gómez Nieto; Aldina Barral; Manoel Barral Netto; Jose M. Requena; Salvador Iborra; Manuel Soto

Different members of intracellular protein families are recognized by the immune system of the vertebrate host infected by parasites of the genus Leishmania. Here, we have analyzed the antigenic and immunogenic properties of the Leishmania eIF2 and eIF2B translation initiation factors. An in silico search in Leishmania infantum sequence databases allowed the identification of the genes encoding the α, β, and γ subunits and the α, β, and δ subunits of the putative Leishmania orthologs of the eukaryotic initiation factors F2 (LieIF2) or F2B (LieIF2B), respectively. The antigenicity of these factors was analyzed by ELISA using recombinant versions of the different subunits. Antibodies against the different LieIF2 and LieIF2B subunits were found in the sera from human and canine visceral leishmaniasis patients, and also in the sera from hamsters experimentally infected with L. infantum. In L. infantum (BALB/c) and Leishmania major (BALB/c or C57BL/6) challenged mice, a moderate humoral response against these protein factors was detected. Remarkably, these proteins elicited an IL-10 production by splenocytes derived from infected mice independently of the Leishmania species employed for experimental challenge. When DNA vaccines based on the expression of the LieIF2 or LieIF2B subunit encoding genes were administered in mice, an antigen-specific secretion of IFN-γ and IL-10 cytokines was observed. Furthermore, a partial protection against murine CL development due to L. major infection was generated in the vaccinated mice. Also, in this work we show that the LieIF2α subunit and the LieIF2Bβ and δ subunits have the capacity to stimulate IL-10 secretion by spleen cells from naïve mice. B-lymphocytes were identified as the major producers of this anti-inflammatory cytokine. Taking into account the data found in this study, it may be hypothesized that these proteins act as virulence factors implicated in the induction of humoral responses as well as in the production of the down-regulatory IL-10 cytokine, favoring a pathological outcome. Therefore, these proteins might be considered markers of disease.


International Journal for Parasitology-Drugs and Drug Resistance | 2018

Genomic and transcriptomic alterations in Leishmania donovani lines experimentally resistant to antileishmanial drugs

Alberto Rastrojo; Raquel García-Hernández; Paola Vargas; Esther Camacho; Laura Corvo; Hideo Imamura; Jean-Claude Dujardin; Santiago Castanys; Begoña Aguado; Francisco Gamarro; Jose M. Requena

Leishmaniasis is a serious medical issue in many countries around the World, but it remains largely neglected in terms of research investment for developing new control and treatment measures. No vaccines exist for human use, and the chemotherapeutic agents currently used are scanty. Furthermore, for some drugs, resistance and treatment failure are increasing to alarming levels. The aim of this work was to identify genomic and trancriptomic alterations associated with experimental resistance against the common drugs used against VL: trivalent antimony (SbIII, S line), amphotericin B (AmB, A line), miltefosine (MIL, M line) and paromomycin (PMM, P line). A total of 1006 differentially expressed transcripts were identified in the S line, 379 in the A line, 146 in the M line, and 129 in the P line. Also, changes in ploidy of chromosomes and amplification/deletion of particular regions were observed in the resistant lines regarding the parental one. A series of genes were identified as possible drivers of the resistance phenotype and were validated in both promastigotes and amastigotes from Leishmania donovani, Leishmania infantum and Leishmania major species. Remarkably, a deletion of the gene LinJ.36.2510 (coding for 24-sterol methyltransferase, SMT) was found to be associated with AmB-resistance in the A line. In the P line, a dramatic overexpression of the transcripts LinJ.27.T1940 and LinJ.27.T1950 that results from a massive amplification of the collinear genes was suggested as one of the mechanisms of PMM resistance. This conclusion was reinforced after transfection experiments in which significant PMM-resistance was generated in WT parasites over-expressing either gene LinJ.27.1940 (coding for a D-lactate dehydrogenase-like protein, D-LDH) or gene LinJ.27.1950 (coding for an aminotransferase of branched-chain amino acids, BCAT). This work allowed to identify new drivers, like SMT, the deletion of which being associated with resistance to AmB, and the tandem D-LDH-BCAT, the amplification of which being related to PMM resistance.


Glycobiology | 2015

Interactions of human galectins with Trypanosoma cruzi Binding profile correlate with genetic clustering of lineages

Miguel A. Pineda; Laura Corvo; Manuel Soto; Manuel Fresno; Pedro Bonay


Archive | 2009

LAS HISTONAS DE LEISHMANIA LEISHMANIA LEISHMANIA LEISHMANIA LEISHMANIA LEISHMANIA HISTONES

Laura Ramírez; Salvador Iborra; Marcia Weber; Daniel R. Abánades; Laura Corvo; Carlos Gómez Nieto; Carlos Alonso; Pedro Bonay; Aldina Barral; Manoel Barral-Netto; Manuel Soto


Archive | 2009

LAS HISTONAS DE LEISHMANIA LEISHMANIA HISTONES

Laura Ramírez; Salvador Iborra; Marcia Weber; Daniel R. Abánades; Laura Corvo; Carlos Gómez Nieto; Carlos Alonso; Pedro Bonay; Aldina Barral; Manoel Barral-Netto; Manuel Soto

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Manuel Soto

Spanish National Research Council

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Pedro Bonay

Spanish National Research Council

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Laura Ramírez

Spanish National Research Council

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Salvador Iborra

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Carlos Alonso

Spanish National Research Council

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Manoel Barral-Netto

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Daniel R. Abánades

Spanish National Research Council

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Jose M. Requena

Spanish National Research Council

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