RESUMEN
Visceral leishmaniais or kala-azar, is a chronic and frequently lethal disease, caused by Leishmania donovani. Clinical signs include malaise, hepatosplenomegaly, hypergammaglobulinemia, fever, cachexia and progressive suppresion of the cellular immune response. Only few studies on prophylactic immunization against this disease have been understaken, mostly with crude antigens, and no vaccine against kala-azar is yet available. In previous studies, we have isolated the Fucose-Mannose Ligand (FML) of L. donovani that strongly and specifically inhibits the in vitro infection of macrophages by promastigotes and amastigotes. The FML behaves as a pontent immunogen for rabbits and mice, and is specifically recognized by kala-azar patient sera. The protective pontential of FML on kala-azar was now analyzed in the CB-hamster model. We studied the efect of three intraperitoneal weekly doses of FML (100 mg) in saponin (100 mg), folowed by an intracardiac injection of 107 amastigotes. Saponin- and saline-treated controls were also included. Protection was highly significant regarding the enhancement of anti-FML antibodies titers, the splenocyte proliferative response, and the intradermal delayed hypersensitivity reaction to antigen, as well as the decrease of the parasite burden in spleen and of splenomegaly. Protection to kala-azar was due to specific FML antigenic properties, since the results obtained by saponin alone were significantly different. We conclude that the use of FML and saponin as a vaccine reduced the disease impact and retarded its onset.