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    Leishmania promastigotes selectively inhibit interleukin 12 induction in bone marrow-derived macrophages from susceptible and resistant mice

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    Leishmania major promastigotes were found to avoid activation of mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMMo) in vitro for production of cytokines that are typically induced during infection with other intracellular pathogens. Coexposure of BMMo to the parasite and other microbial stimuli resulted in complete inhibition ofinterleukin (IL) 12 (p40) mRNA induction and IL-12 release. In contrast, mRNA and protein levels for IL-lot, IL-113, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) ci, and inducible NO synthase (iNOS) were only partially reduced, and signals for IL-10 and monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP-1/JE) were enhanced. The parasite could provide a detectable trigger for TNF-cx and iNOS in BMMo primed with interferon (IFN) y, but still failed to induce IL-12. Thus IL-12 induction is selectively impaired after infection, whereas activation pathways for other monokine responses remain relatively intact. Selective and complete inhibition of IL-12(p40) induction was observed using BMMo from either genetically susceptible or resistant mouse strains, as well as IL-10 knockout mice, and was obtained using promastigotes from cutaneous, visceral, and lipophosphoglycan-deficient strains of Leishmania. The impaired production of the major physiologic inducer oflFN-y is suggested to underlie the relatively prolonged interval of parasite intracellular survival and replication that i
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