Wellcome Sanger Institute, Hinxton, United Kingdom.
Leishmaniasis Research and Treatment Centre, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia.
mBio. 2021 Jun 29;12(3):e0097121. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00971-21.
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a fatal disease and a growing public health problem in East Africa, where Ethiopia has one of the highest VL burdens. The largest focus of VL in Ethiopia is driven by high prevalence in migrant agricultural workers and associated with a high rate of coinfection with HIV. This coinfection makes VL more difficult to treat successfully and is associated with a high rate of relapse, with VL/HIV patients frequently experiencing many relapses of VL before succumbing to this infection. We present genome-wide data on Leishmania donovani isolates from a longitudinal study of cohorts of VL and VL/HIV patients reporting to a single clinic in Ethiopia. Extensive clinical data allow us to investigate the influence of coinfection and relapse on the populations of parasites infecting these patients. We find that the same parasite population is responsible for both VL and VL/HIV infections and that, in most cases, disease relapse is caused by recrudescence of the population of parasites that caused primary VL. Complex, multiclonal infections are present in both primary and relapse cases, but the infrapopulation of parasites within a patient loses genetic diversity between primary disease presentation and subsequent relapses, presumably due to a population bottleneck induced by treatment. These data suggest that VL/HIV relapses are not caused by genetically distinct parasite infections or by reinfection. Treatment of VL does not lead to sterile cure, and in VL/HIV, the infecting parasites are able to reestablish after clinically successful treatment, leading to repeated relapse of VL. Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is the second largest cause of deaths due to parasite infections and a growing problem in East Africa. In Ethiopia, it is particularly associated with migrant workers moving from regions of nonendemicity for seasonal agricultural work and is frequently found as a coinfection with HIV, which leads to frequent VL relapse following treatment. Insight into the process of relapse in these patients is thus key to controlling the VL epidemic in Ethiopia. We show that there is little genetic differentiation between the parasites infecting HIV-positive and HIV-negative VL patients. Moreover, we provide evidence that relapses are caused by the initially infecting parasite population and that treatment induces a loss of genetic diversity in this population. We propose that restoring functioning immunity and improving antiparasitic treatment may be key in breaking the cycle of relapsing VL in VL/HIV patients.
内脏利什曼病(VL)是一种致命疾病,也是东非日益严重的公共卫生问题,埃塞俄比亚是 VL 负担最重的国家之一。埃塞俄比亚最大的 VL 集中区是由移民农业工人中的高患病率驱动的,并且与 HIV 合并感染率高有关。这种合并感染使 VL 更难成功治疗,并与高复发率相关,VL/HIV 患者在感染这种疾病之前经常经历多次 VL 复发。我们展示了来自埃塞俄比亚一家诊所报告的 VL 和 VL/HIV 患者队列的纵向研究中利什曼原虫属分离株的全基因组数据。广泛的临床数据使我们能够研究合并感染和复发对感染这些患者的寄生虫种群的影响。我们发现,同一寄生虫种群可引起 VL 和 VL/HIV 感染,并且在大多数情况下,疾病复发是由引起原发性 VL 的寄生虫种群的复发引起的。原发性和复发病例均存在复杂的多克隆感染,但患者内寄生虫的亚种群在原发性疾病表现和随后的复发之间失去遗传多样性,这可能是由于治疗引起的种群瓶颈所致。这些数据表明,VL/HIV 复发不是由遗传上不同的寄生虫感染或再感染引起的。VL 的治疗并未导致无菌治愈,并且在 VL/HIV 中,在临床上成功治疗后,感染的寄生虫能够重新建立,从而导致 VL 的反复复发。
内脏利什曼病(VL)是寄生虫感染导致死亡的第二大原因,也是东非日益严重的问题。在埃塞俄比亚,它尤其与季节性农业工作从非流行地区移民的移民工人有关,并且经常与 HIV 合并感染,这导致治疗后 VL 频繁复发。因此,深入了解这些患者的复发过程是控制埃塞俄比亚 VL 流行的关键。我们发现感染 HIV 阳性和 HIV 阴性 VL 患者的寄生虫之间几乎没有遗传差异。此外,我们提供的证据表明,复发是由最初感染的寄生虫种群引起的,并且治疗会诱导该种群的遗传多样性丧失。我们提出,恢复功能免疫和改善抗寄生虫治疗可能是打破 VL/HIV 患者复发性 VL 循环的关键。