International Journal for Parasitology
Volume 39, Issue 2, 15 January 2009, Pages 251-256
Cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania infantum transmitted by Phlebotomus tobbi☆
Abstract
Transmission of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania infantum was studied in South Anatolia, Turkey. Small, non-ulcerating lesions prevailed and patients were negative in rK39 tests for antibody detection for human visceral leishmaniasis (VL). The most abundant sand fly species, Phlebotomus tobbi, was found positive for Leishmania promastigotes with a prevalence of 1.4% (13 out of 898 dissected females). The isolated strains were identical with those obtained from patients with CL and were typed as L. infantum. Phylogenetic analysis revealed similarity to MON-188 and a clear difference from the MON-1 clade. Blood-meal identification showed that P. tobbi feeds preferentially on cattle and humans. This finding, the high number of CL patients and relative scarcity of dogs in the focus, suggests that the transmission cycle could be anthroponotic.
Introduction
Leishmaniases are diseases with a wide spectrum of clinical forms, from relatively mild cutaneous lesions to life-threatening visceral diseases. Their causative agents, protozoans of the genus Leishmania (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae), are transmitted by phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae).
In Turkey, visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is caused by Leishmania infantum and affects mainly children (Ozcel et al., 1999, Ok et al., 2002, Tanir et al., 2006). Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is endemic in several regions of Turkey. It has been attributed almost exclusively to Leishmania tropica although sporadic occurrence of Leishmania major has been also reported (Akman et al., 2000). The biggest outbreak with over 11,000 reported cases occurred recently in Sanliurfa (Ok et al., 2002) and the parasite has been typed as L. tropica (Gramiccia et al., 1991, Waki et al., 2007). However, several other foci exist including Cukurova, a part of the Mediterranean region with Adana being the capital. Since 1985, thousands of new CL cases have emerged there and it has been suggested that the causative agent is L. tropica (Ok et al., 2002, Uzun et al., 1999). In parallel, vectors of Leishmania have been investigated in CL foci in Turkey (Volf et al., 2000, Simsek et al., 2007) but infected sand flies were never found.
We performed a study on humans and sand flies in the CL focus in Cukurova region where, according to the local health centers, hundreds of human cases continue to occur every year. Surprisingly, the causative agent of human CL was identified as L. infantum. We also found 13 Phlebotomus tobbi infected with L. infantum, and demonstrated that human isolates of L. infantum from the study area are identical to isolates from P. tobbi.
Section snippets
Study area
The study was performed in two adjacent areas in the North part of Cukurova region, south Anatolia, during 2005–2007. South Anatolia is bound by the West Taurus Mountains, the mountain ranges of Taurus and anti-Taurus to the North, and the Amanos Mountains to the East (Fig. 1). The Western part of the focus comprises five villages approximately 55 km northeast of Adana city with an altitude of 150–280 m above sea level: Tepecikören (37°21′46′′N, 35°37′40′′E), Zerdali, Camili, Aydın and Otluk. The
Phlebotomine fauna
In total, seven sand fly species were identified (five in the Western part and four in the Eastern part of the focus), in both parts the most abundant being P. tobbi (Table 1). Interestingly, Phlebotomus papatasi and Phlebotomus perfiliewi were found only in the Western part while Phlebotomus simici was present only in the Eastern part of the focus. For P. cf. syriacus the morphological examination and measurements of male genitalia did not result in identification as the specimens were of
Discussion
The etiological agent of CL in the Cukurova region was identified as L. infantum. Although we have attempted to isolate Leishmania from several dozens of patients, only in six samples were promastigotes observed in cultivation medium and one isolate has been established in vitro. Leishmania infantum is notoriously difficult to cultivate from cutaneous lesions (Gramiccia et al., 1991). This parasite species has been incriminated for the first time as a causative agent of human CL in France (
Acknowledgments
We thank Y. Bayazit, M. Soyler, I. Bayar, M. Uluyurt, Z. Egri, Y. Sakalli for help during field work, J.-C. Dujardin for providing positive sera, and Richard Ward for helpful comments. The work was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (206/05/0380, 206/05/P045) and Czech Ministry of Education (MSM 0021620828, LC06009).
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