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Featured researches published by Marliane Batista Campos.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2010

A prospective study on the dynamics of the clinical and immunological evolution of human Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi infection in the Brazilian Amazon region

F.T. Silveira; R. Lainson; José Ângelo Crescente; Adelson Alcimar Almeida de Souza; Marliane Batista Campos; C.M. Gomes; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett

This prospective study was carried out from October 2003 to December 2005 and involved a cohort of 946 individuals of both genders, aged 1-89 years, from an endemic area for American visceral leishmaniasis (AVL), in Pará State, Brazil. The aim of the study was to analyze the dynamics of the clinical and immunological evolution of human Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi infection represented by the following clinical-immunological profiles: asymptomatic infection (AI); symptomatic infection (SI=AVL); subclinical oligosymptomatic infection (SOI); subclinical resistant infection (SRI); and indeterminate initial infection (III). Infection diagnosis was determined by the indirect fluorescent antibody test and leishmanin skin test. In total, 231 cases of infection were diagnosed: the AI profile was the most frequent (73.2%), followed by SRI (12.1%), III (9.9%), SI (2.6%) and SOI (2.2%). The major conclusion regarding evolution dynamics was that the III profile plays a pivotal role from which the cases evolve to either the resistant, SRI and AI, or susceptible, SOI and SI, profiles; only one of the 23 III cases evolved to SI, while most evolved to either SRI (nine cases) or SOI (five cases) and eight cases remained as III.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2010

Canine visceral leishmaniasis due to Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi in Amazonian Brazil: comparison of the parasite density from the skin, lymph node and visceral tissues between symptomatic and asymptomatic, seropositive dogs

Luciana Vieira do Rêgo Lima; Liliane Almeida Carneiro; Marliane Batista Campos; Eujênia Janis Chagas; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett; Ralph Lainson; Fernando Tobias Silveira

Canine visceral leishmaniasis (CVL) is recognizable by characteristic signs of disease and is highly lethal. The infection, however, may be quite inapparent in some seropositive dogs, and this has raised the polemic question as to whether or not such animals can be a source of infection for Lutzomyia longipalpis, the vector of American visceral leishmaniasis (AVL). In this study we have examined 51 dogs with acute CVL from an AVL area in Pará State, northern Brazil, and compared the parasite density, amastigotes of Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi, in the skin, lymph node and viscera of symptomatic with that of nine asymptomatic but seropositive dogs (IFAT-IgG). Post-mortem biopsy fragments of these tissues were processed by immunohistochemistry, using a polyclonal antibody against Leishmania sp. The X² and Mann Whitney tests were used to evaluate the means of infected macrophage density (p < 0.05). There was no difference (p > 0.05) in the skin (10.7/mm² x 15.5/mm²) and lymph node (6.3/mm² x 8.3/mm²), between asymptomatic and symptomatic dogs, respectively. It was higher (p < 0.05), however, in the viscera of symptomatic (5.3/mm²) than it was in asymptomatic (1.4/mm²) dogs. These results strongly suggest that asymptomatic or symptomatic L. (L.) i. chagasi-infected dogs can serve as a source of infection, principally considering the highest (p < 0.05) parasite density from skin (10.7/mm² x 15.5/mm²), the place where the vetor L. longipalpis takes its blood meal, compared with those from lymph node (6.3/mm² x 8.3/mm²) and viscera (1.4/mm²x 5.3/mm²).


Revista Pan-Amazônica de Saúde | 2010

Fauna flebotomínica da Serra dos Carajás, Estado do Pará, Brasil, e sua possível implicação na transmissão da leishmaniose tegumentar americana

Adelson Alcimar Almeida de Souza; Fernando Tobias Silveira; R. Lainson; Iorlando da Rocha Barata; Maria das Graças Soares Silva; José Aprígio Nunes Lima; Maria Sueli Barros Pinheiro; Fábio Márcio Medeiros da Silva; Lindomar de Souza Vasconcelos; Marliane Batista Campos; Edna Aoba Yassui Ishikawa

Serra dos Carajas, located in the southeast of Para State, Brazil, is a rich tropical forest where species of Leishmania sp. of medical interest are found, such as Leishmania (V.) braziliensis, L. (V.) lainsoni, L. (V.) shawi and L. (L.) amazonensis. They are transmitted by the following phlebotomi: Psychodopygus complexus or Ps. wellcomei, Lutzomyia ubiquitalis, Lu. whitmani and Lu. flaviscutellata. Considering the increase of immigrants in the region of the Carajas project, this study aimed to assess the Phlebotominae fauna and their possible participation in the transmission of American cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL). The phlebotomi were captured from December 2005 to September 2007 at the following locations: i) Parauapebas Botanical Park; ii) an environmental protection area; and iii) Tapirape-Aquiri National Forest. During the 172 days of collection, 10 CDC (18 h to 6 h) and 2 Shannon (18 h to 20 h) light traps were used. Of the 22,095 phlebotomi captured, 6,789 (31%) were male and 15,306 (69%) were female, and they belonged to 69 species and three genera, including Psychodopygus, Lutzomyia and Brumptomyia. A total of 19 (0.16%) natural infections of the following species were detected: Ps. davisi (4), Ps. h. hirsutus (3), Lu. umbratilis (3), Lu. richardward (2), Lu. brachipyga (2), Lu. ubiquitalis (2), Lu. trinidadensis (1) and Lu. migonei (1). Although no infection was found in Ps. wellcomei/complexus, the main vector of L. (V.) braziliensis in the region, this species was the most prevalent (16%), followed by Ps. davisi (15.4%), Ps. carrerai (4.2%), Lu. shawi (3.9%), Lu. brachipyga (2.5%) and Lu. richardward (1.2%). These results show the importance of these phlebotomi as possible vectors of ACL in Serra dos Carajas.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2012

Susceptibility of peritoneal macrophage from different species of neotropical primates to Ex vivo Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection

Liliane Almeida Carneiro; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti; Marliane Batista Campos; Claudia Maria de Castro Gomes; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett; Fernando Tobias Silveira

This study examined the susceptibility of peritoneal macrophage (PM) from the Neotropical primates: Callithrix jacchus, Callithrix penicillata, Saimiri sciureus, Aotus azarae infulatus and Callimico goeldii to ex vivo Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection, the etiological agent of American visceral leishmaniasis (AVL), as a screening assay for evaluating the potential of these non-human primates as experimental models for studying AVL. The PM-susceptibility to infection was accessed by the PM-infection index (PMI) at 24, 72 h and by the mean of these rates (FPMI), as well as by the TNF-α, IL-12 (Capture ELISA) and Nitric oxide (NO) responses (Griess method). At 24h, the PMI of A. azarae infulatus (128) was higher than those of C. penicillata (83), C. goeldii (78), S. sciureus (77) and C. jacchus (55). At 72h, there was a significant PMI decrease in four monkeys: A. azarae infulatus (128/37), C. penicillata (83/38), S. sciureus (77/38) and C. jacchus (55/12), with exception of C. goeldii (78/54). The FPMI of A. azarae infulatus (82.5) and C. goeldii (66) were higher than C. jacchus (33.5), but not higher than those of C. penicillata (60.5) and S. sciureus (57.5). The TNF-a response was more regular in those four primates which decreased their PMI at 24/72 h: C. jacchus (145/122 pg/mL), C. penicillata (154/130 pg/mL), S. sciureus (164/104 pg/mL) and A. azarae infulatus (154/104 pg/mL), with exception of C. goeldii (38/83 pg/mL). The IL-12 response was mainly prominent in A. infulatus and C. goeldii which presented the highest FPMI and, the NO response was higher in C. goeldii, mainly at 72 h. These findings strongly suggest that these New World primates have developed a resistant innate immune response mechanism capable of controlling the macrophage intracellular growth of L. (L.) i. chagasi-infection, which do not encourage their use as animal model for studying AVL.


Pathogens and Global Health | 2014

Preclinical diagnosis of American visceral leishmaniasis during early onset of human Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection

Luciana Vieira do Rêgo Lima; Patrícia Karla Santos Ramos; Marliane Batista Campos; Thiago Vasconcelos dos Santos; Claudia Maria de Castro Gomes; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett; Fernando Tobias Silveira

Abstract American visceral leishmaniasis (AVL) is an infectious disease, often with long-duration evolution, caused by Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi. However, although the disease is considered the major clinical manifestation of the link between L. (L.) i. chagasi and the human immune response, we have recently identified five clinical–immunological profiles of infection in the Brazilian Amazon: three asymptomatic (Asymptomatic Infection — AI, Sub-clinical Resistant Infection — SRI, and Indeterminate Initial Infection — III), and two symptomatic ones [Symptomatic Infection — SI ( = AVL) and Sub-clinical Oligosymptomatic Infection — SOI]. We confirm here the preclinical diagnosis of AVL through the IgM-antibody response in a case of an early infection (profile III) that evolved to the full disease after 6 weeks.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2017

Use of Recombinant Antigens for Sensitive Serodiagnosis of American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis Caused by Different Leishmania Species

Camila Massae Sato; Maria Carmen Arroyo Sanchez; Beatriz Julieta Celeste; Malcolm S. Duthie; Jeffrey A. Guderian; Steven G. Reed; Maria Edileuza Felinto de Brito; Marliane Batista Campos; Helia Valeria de Souza Encarnação; Jorge Guerra; Tirza Gabrielle Ramos de Mesquita; Suzana Kanawati Pinheiro; Rajendranath Ramasawmy; Fernando Tobias Silveira; Marina de Assis Souza; Hiro Goto

ABSTRACT American tegumentary leishmaniasis (ATL) (also known as cutaneous leishmaniasis [CL]) is caused by various species of protozoa of the genus Leishmania. The diagnosis is achieved on a clinical, epidemiological, and pathological basis, supported by positive parasitological exams and demonstration of leishmanin delayed-type hypersensitivity. Serological assays are not routinely used in the diagnosis because many are considered to have low sensitivity and the particular Leishmania species causing the disease can lead to variable performance. In the present study, we generated recombinant versions of two highly conserved Leishmania proteins, Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis-derived Lb8E and Lb6H, and evaluated both in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). Recombinant Lb6H (rLb6H) had better performance and reacted with 100.0% of the ATL and 89.4% of the VL samples. These reactions with rLb6H were highly specific (98.5%) when compared against those for samples from healthy control individuals. We then assessed rLb6H against sera from ATL patients infected with different species of Leishmania prevalent in Brazil [Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis, L. (Viannia) braziliensis, and L. (V.) guyanensis] and samples from patients with other infectious diseases. In analyses of 500 sera, ELISA using rLb6H detected all 219 ATL samples (sensitivity of 100.0%) with an overall specificity of 93.9% (considering healthy individuals and other infectious diseases patients). Only a minority of samples from Chagas disease patients possessed antibodies against rLb6H, and all of these responses were low (with a highest reactivity index of 2.2). Taken together, our data support further evaluation of rLb6H and the potential for its routine use in the serological diagnosis of ATL.


BioMed Research International | 2016

Serum Cytokine Responses over the Entire Clinical-Immunological Spectrum of Human Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi Infection

Patrícia Karla Santos Ramos; Karina I. Carvalho; Daniela Santoro Rosa; Ana Paula D. Rodrigues; Luciana Vieira do Rêgo Lima; Marliane Batista Campos; Claudia Maria de Castro Gomes; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett; Fernando Tobias Silveira

The clinical-immunological spectrum of human Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi infection in Amazonian Brazil was recently reviewed based on clinical, DTH, and IFAT (IgG) evaluations that identified five profiles: three asymptomatic (asymptomatic infection, AI; subclinical resistant infection, SRI; and indeterminate initial infection, III) and two symptomatic (symptomatic infection, SI; American visceral leishmaniasis, AVL; and subclinical oligosymptomatic infection, SOI). TNF-α, IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10 serum cytokines were analyzed using multiplexed Cytometric Bead Array in 161 samples from endemic areas in the Brazilian Amazon: SI [AVL] (21 cases), III (49), SRI (19), SOI (12), AI (36), and a control group [CG] (24). The highest IL-6 serum levels were observed in the SI profile (AVL); higher IL-10 serum levels were observed in SI than in SOI or CG and in AI and III than in SOI; higher TNF-α serum levels were seen in SI than in CG. Positive correlations were found between IL-6 and IL-10 serum levels in the SI and III profiles and between IL-6 and TNF-α and between IL-4 and TNF-α in the III profile. These results provide strong evidence for associating IL-6 and IL-10 with the immunopathogenesis of AVL and help clarify the role of these cytokines in the infection spectrum.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2011

Susceptibility of Cebus apella monkey (Primates: Cebidae) to experimental Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection

Liliane Almeida Carneiro; Fernando Tobias Silveira; Marliane Batista Campos; Maria do Carmo de Oliveira Brígido; Claudia Maria de Castro Gomes; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti

In Amazonian Brazil, the Cebus apella monkey (Primates: Cebidae) has been associated with the enzootic cycle of Leishmania (V.) shawi, a dermotropic parasite causing American cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL). It has also been successfully used as animal model for studying cutaneous leishmaniasis. In this work, there has been investigated its susceptibility to experimental Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection, the etiologic agent of American visceral leishmaniasis (AVL). There were used ten C. apella specimens, eight adult and two young, four males and six females, all born and raised in captivity. Two experimental infection protocols were performed: i) six monkeys were inoculated, intra-dermal via (ID), into the base of the tail with 2 x 10(6) promastigotes forms from the stationary phase culture medium; ii) other four monkeys were inoculated with 3 x 10(7) amastigotes forms from the visceral infection of infected hamsters by two different via: a) two by intravenous via (IV) and, b) other two by intra-peritoneal via (IP). The parameters of infection evaluation included: a) clinical: physical exam of abdomen, weigh and body temperature; b) parasitological: needle aspiration of the bone-marrow for searching of amastigotes (Giemsa-stained smears) and promastigotes forms (culture medium); c) immunological: Indirect fluorescence antibody test (IFAT) and, Delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH). In the six monkeys ID inoculated (promastigotes forms) all parameters of infection evaluation were negative during the 12 months period of follow-up. Among the four monkeys inoculated with amastigotes forms, two IV inoculated showed the parasite in the bone-marrow from the first toward to the sixth month p.i. and following that they cleared the infection, whereas the other two IP inoculated were totally negative. These four monkeys showed specific IgG-antibody response since the third month p.i. (IP: 1/80 and IV: 1/320 IgG) toward to the 12th month (IP: 1/160 and IV: 1/5120). The DTH-conversion occurred in only one IV inoculated monkey with a strong (30 mm) skin reaction. Considering these results, we do not encourage the use of C. apella monkey as animal model for studying the AVL.


Revista Pan-Amazônica de Saúde | 2010

Phlebotominae fauna in Serra dos Carajás, Pará State, Brazil, and its possible implications for the transmission of American tegumentar leishmaniasis

Adelson Alcimar Almeida de Souza; Fernando Tobias Silveira; R. Lainson; Iorlando da Rocha Barata; Maria das Graças Soares Silva; José Aprígio Nunes Lima; Maria Sueli Barros Pinheiro; Fábio Márcio Medeiros da Silva; Lindomar de Souza Vasconcelos; Marliane Batista Campos; Edna Aoba Yassui Ishikawa

Serra dos Carajas, located in the southeast of Para State, Brazil, is a rich tropical forest where species of Leishmania sp. of medical interest are found, such as Leishmania (V.) braziliensis, L. (V.) lainsoni, L. (V.) shawi and L. (L.) amazonensis. They are transmitted by the following phlebotomi: Psychodopygus complexus or Ps. wellcomei, Lutzomyia ubiquitalis, Lu. whitmani and Lu. flaviscutellata. Considering the increase of immigrants in the region of the Carajas project, this study aimed to assess the Phlebotominae fauna and their possible participation in the transmission of American cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL). The phlebotomi were captured from December 2005 to September 2007 at the following locations: i) Parauapebas Botanical Park; ii) an environmental protection area; and iii) Tapirape-Aquiri National Forest. During the 172 days of collection, 10 CDC (18 h to 6 h) and 2 Shannon (18 h to 20 h) light traps were used. Of the 22,095 phlebotomi captured, 6,789 (31%) were male and 15,306 (69%) were female, and they belonged to 69 species and three genera, including Psychodopygus, Lutzomyia and Brumptomyia. A total of 19 (0.16%) natural infections of the following species were detected: Ps. davisi (4), Ps. h. hirsutus (3), Lu. umbratilis (3), Lu. richardward (2), Lu. brachipyga (2), Lu. ubiquitalis (2), Lu. trinidadensis (1) and Lu. migonei (1). Although no infection was found in Ps. wellcomei/complexus, the main vector of L. (V.) braziliensis in the region, this species was the most prevalent (16%), followed by Ps. davisi (15.4%), Ps. carrerai (4.2%), Lu. shawi (3.9%), Lu. brachipyga (2.5%) and Lu. richardward (1.2%). These results show the importance of these phlebotomi as possible vectors of ACL in Serra dos Carajas.


Parasite | 2017

Further evidence associating IgG1, but not IgG2, with susceptibility to canine visceral leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection

Luciana Vieira do Rêgo Lima; Liliane Almeida Carneiro; Marliane Batista Campos; Thiago Vasconcelos dos Santos; Patrícia Karla Santos Ramos; Márcia Dalastra Laurenti; Cláudio Eduardo Corrêa Teixeira; F.T. Silveira

We present here a cross-sectional study analyzing the IgG1 and IgG2 immune responses to natural canine Leishmania (L.) infantum chagasi-infection and their relationships with delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) in 50 mongrel dogs with previous positive serodiagnoses (IFAT-IgG) (56% with subclinical status [= apparently healthy] and 44% clinically sick), living in endemic areas for visceral leishmaniasis in the Brazilian Amazon. IgG1 and IgG2 responses were measured using commercial polyclonal antibodies in ELISA, while DTH was elicited by intradermal skin test using cultured promastigotes L. (L.) i. chagasi-antigen. Data analyses used Chi-square and Pearsons r coefficient (95% confidence interval). Regarding DTH and the clinical statuses of dogs, it was noted that 100% of the animals showing positive DTH (n = 8) were from the subclinical group, while 100% showing negative DTH were from the clinically sick group; higher IgG2 than IgG1 responses were observed in both clinical groups. However, when this comparison was made between the subclinical and sick groups, higher IgG1 responses were noted in the dogs from the sick rather than the subclinical group, while no differences were noted between the IgG2 responses in the dogs from both clinical groups. Additionally, we found lower IgG1 responses in dogs from the subclinical group showing positive DTH than in the dogs from the subclinical or sick groups with negative DTH; no differences were found between the IgG2 responses of these two clinical groups. These findings suggest that the IgG1, but not the IgG2, response is associated with susceptibility to canine visceral leishmaniasis (CVL).

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F.T. Silveira

Evandro Chagas Institute

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