In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.

Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is characterized by expansion of myeloid cells in the liver and spleen, which leads to a severe splenomegaly associated with higher risk of mortality. This increased cellularity is thought to be a consequence of recruitment of cells to the viscera. We studied whether the...

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Main Authors: E Yaneth Osorio, Audrie A Medina-Colorado, Bruno L Travi, Peter C Melby
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242337
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spelling doaj-5474b0a8a4514b299561e36f55f44c012021-03-04T12:28:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011511e024233710.1371/journal.pone.0242337In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.E Yaneth OsorioAudrie A Medina-ColoradoBruno L TraviPeter C MelbyVisceral leishmaniasis (VL) is characterized by expansion of myeloid cells in the liver and spleen, which leads to a severe splenomegaly associated with higher risk of mortality. This increased cellularity is thought to be a consequence of recruitment of cells to the viscera. We studied whether the local proliferation of splenic myeloid cells contributes to increased splenic cellularity. We found that a monocyte-like population of adherent splenic cells from Leishmania donovani-infected hamsters had enhanced replicative capacity ex vivo and in vivo (BrdU incorporation, p<0.0001). In vitro assays demonstrated that proliferation was more pronounced in the proinflammatory M1 environment and that intracellular infection prevented proliferation. Secondary analysis of the published splenic transcriptome in the hamster model of progressive VL revealed a gene expression signature that included division of tumoral cells (Z = 2.0), cell cycle progression (Z = 2.3), hematopoiesis (Z = 2.8), proliferation of stem cells (Z = 2.5) and overexpression of proto-oncogenes. Regulators of myeloid cell proliferation were predicted in-silico (CSF2, TLR4, IFNG, IL-6, IL-4, RTK signaling, and STAT3). The in-silico prediction was confirmed with chemical inhibitors of PI3K/AKT, MAPK and STAT3 which decreased splenic myeloid cell division ex vivo. Hamsters infected with L. donovani treated with a STAT3 inhibitor had reduced in situ splenic myeloid proliferation (p = 0.03) and parasite burden. We conclude that monocyte-like myeloid cells have increased STAT3-dependent proliferation in the spleen of hamsters with visceral leishmaniasis and that inhibition of STAT3 reduces myeloid cell proliferation and parasite burden.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242337
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E Yaneth Osorio
Audrie A Medina-Colorado
Bruno L Travi
Peter C Melby
spellingShingle E Yaneth Osorio
Audrie A Medina-Colorado
Bruno L Travi
Peter C Melby
In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet E Yaneth Osorio
Audrie A Medina-Colorado
Bruno L Travi
Peter C Melby
author_sort E Yaneth Osorio
title In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
title_short In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
title_full In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
title_fullStr In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
title_full_unstemmed In-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
title_sort in-situ proliferation contributes to the accumulation of myeloid cells in the spleen during progressive experimental visceral leishmaniasis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is characterized by expansion of myeloid cells in the liver and spleen, which leads to a severe splenomegaly associated with higher risk of mortality. This increased cellularity is thought to be a consequence of recruitment of cells to the viscera. We studied whether the local proliferation of splenic myeloid cells contributes to increased splenic cellularity. We found that a monocyte-like population of adherent splenic cells from Leishmania donovani-infected hamsters had enhanced replicative capacity ex vivo and in vivo (BrdU incorporation, p<0.0001). In vitro assays demonstrated that proliferation was more pronounced in the proinflammatory M1 environment and that intracellular infection prevented proliferation. Secondary analysis of the published splenic transcriptome in the hamster model of progressive VL revealed a gene expression signature that included division of tumoral cells (Z = 2.0), cell cycle progression (Z = 2.3), hematopoiesis (Z = 2.8), proliferation of stem cells (Z = 2.5) and overexpression of proto-oncogenes. Regulators of myeloid cell proliferation were predicted in-silico (CSF2, TLR4, IFNG, IL-6, IL-4, RTK signaling, and STAT3). The in-silico prediction was confirmed with chemical inhibitors of PI3K/AKT, MAPK and STAT3 which decreased splenic myeloid cell division ex vivo. Hamsters infected with L. donovani treated with a STAT3 inhibitor had reduced in situ splenic myeloid proliferation (p = 0.03) and parasite burden. We conclude that monocyte-like myeloid cells have increased STAT3-dependent proliferation in the spleen of hamsters with visceral leishmaniasis and that inhibition of STAT3 reduces myeloid cell proliferation and parasite burden.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242337
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