We recently reported that Leishmania donovani infect the human T-cell line in vitro. To examine whether
primary human T cells could be infected by this parasite, a direct interaction of the peripheral blood T cells
with L. donovani was examined. The percentage of g/dþ T cells was markedly increased when in vitro
generated normal human T-cell blasts were cultured with L. donovani amastigotes. About 30% of the g/dþ T
cells in the parasite exposed T-cell blasts expressed parasite antigens intracellularly without detectable
intracellular parasites. Parasite exposed T-cell blasts had a reduced surface expression of HLA-DR and were
lysed by the sorted CD56þ cells. In contrast, neither L. donovani amastigotes nor T-cell blasts exposed to heat
killed amastigotes and/or were sensitive to the NK cell-mediated lysis. Of interest is that about 10% CD3þ
peripheral blood T cells in two out of three Indian Kala-azar patients tested expressed intracellular L. donovani
antigen