Browsing by Author "Mutiso, Joshua Muli."
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Item Evaluation of Bacille Calmette Guerin, Montanide Isa 720 and Aluminium Hydroxide as Adjuvants for Leishmania Vaccine in Salu/E Mice(Kenyatta University, 2009-04) Mutiso, Joshua Muli.Leishmaniases are parasitic diseases caused by protozoan flagellates of the genus Leishmania. These parasites infect numerous mammalian species, including humans, and are transmitted through the infective bite of an insect vector, the female Phlebotomus sandfly. Leishmaniasis is currently endemic in 88 countries, and is a threat to 350 million people with a worldwide prevalence of 14 million clinical cases and 12 million new cases each year. Drugs for leishmaniasis are generally toxic and their cost is prohibitive. Vector control measures are poorly implemented and inaccessible to many peopple in developing contries. In leishmaniasis, protection requires leishmanial-specific CD4+ T helper-I (Thl) cells. Effective vaccination against leishmaniasis would be cheaper and accessible. Unfortunately, so far there is no vaccine against leishmaniasis for routine use. Immunity to cutaneous leishmaniasis, a chronic skin-disfiguring lesion affecting millions, has been historically achieved by inoculation with live virulent preparations of the parasite. Killed antigens that could be safer as vaccines generally require an adjuvant for the induction of strong Th 1 response in murine models. The objective of this study was to assess and compare the immune responses and efficacy of a vaccine containing Bacille calmette guerin (BCG), aluminium hydroxide (alum) and Montanide ISA 720 (MISA 720) as adjuvants combined with killed Leishmania major vaccine (KLM) in BALB/c mice. Sixty mice were immunized three times at weeks 0, 4 and 6 and two weeks later, either sacrificed for comparative immunogenicity analysis or challenged with virulent L. major for efficacy monitoring. Splenic blood lymphocytes were stimulated in culture with KLM antigens or concanavalin A and their proliferation quantified. Sera immunoglobulin gamma (IgG) and in vitro interferon gamma (IFN-y) production were measured by enzyme linked immunosorbent asssay (ELISA) using Leishmania antigen and cross-reactive monoclonal antibody. Lesion development in infected mice footpads were monitored for 8 weeks and parasite loads determined there after. The results indicated higher IgG responses in the BCG-KLM and alum-Kl.M vaccinated mice as compared to the MISA-KLM mice. Antigen-specific lymphoproliferative in vitro response showed significantly higher (p<0.01) responses in the MISA-KLM as compared to alum-KLM and also BCG-KLM groups. The BCG-KLM group recorded significantly higher IFN-y production (p