TY - JOUR AU - Barbosa MGM AU - Andrade Silva BJ AU - Assis TQ AU - Prata RBS AU - Ferreira H AU - Andrade P AU - Paixão de Oliveira JA AU - da Silva G AU - Costa Nery JA AU - Sarno E AU - Pinheiro R AB -

Leprosy reactions are responsible for incapacities in leprosy and represent the major cause of permanent neuropathy. The identification of biomarkers able to identify patients more prone to develop reaction could contribute to adequate clinical management and the prevention of disability. Reversal reaction may occur in unstable borderline patients and also in lepromatous patients. To identify biomarker signature profiles related with the reversal reaction onset, multibacillary patients were recruited and classified accordingly the occurrence or not of reversal reaction during or after multidrugtherapy. Analysis of skin lesion cells at diagnosis of multibacillary leprosy demonstrated that in the group that developed reaction (T1R) in the future there was a downregulation of autophagy associated with the overexpression of and . The autophagy impairment in T1R group was associated with increased expression of , caspase-1 (p10) and IL-1β production. In addition, analysis of IL-1β production in serum from multibacillary patients demonstrated that patients who developed reversal reaction have significantly increased concentrations of IL-1β at diagnosis, suggesting that the pattern of innate immune responses could predict the reactional episode outcome. analysis demonstrated that the blockade of autophagy with 3-methyladenine (3-MA) in -stimulated human primary monocytes increased the assembly of NLRP3 specks assembly, and it was associated with an increase of IL-1β and IL-6 production. Together, our data suggest an important role for autophagy in multibacillary leprosy patients to avoid exacerbated inflammasome activation and the onset of reversal reaction.

BT - Frontiers in immunology C1 -

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29915584?dopt=Abstract

DO - 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01223 J2 - Front Immunol LA - eng N2 -

Leprosy reactions are responsible for incapacities in leprosy and represent the major cause of permanent neuropathy. The identification of biomarkers able to identify patients more prone to develop reaction could contribute to adequate clinical management and the prevention of disability. Reversal reaction may occur in unstable borderline patients and also in lepromatous patients. To identify biomarker signature profiles related with the reversal reaction onset, multibacillary patients were recruited and classified accordingly the occurrence or not of reversal reaction during or after multidrugtherapy. Analysis of skin lesion cells at diagnosis of multibacillary leprosy demonstrated that in the group that developed reaction (T1R) in the future there was a downregulation of autophagy associated with the overexpression of and . The autophagy impairment in T1R group was associated with increased expression of , caspase-1 (p10) and IL-1β production. In addition, analysis of IL-1β production in serum from multibacillary patients demonstrated that patients who developed reversal reaction have significantly increased concentrations of IL-1β at diagnosis, suggesting that the pattern of innate immune responses could predict the reactional episode outcome. analysis demonstrated that the blockade of autophagy with 3-methyladenine (3-MA) in -stimulated human primary monocytes increased the assembly of NLRP3 specks assembly, and it was associated with an increase of IL-1β and IL-6 production. Together, our data suggest an important role for autophagy in multibacillary leprosy patients to avoid exacerbated inflammasome activation and the onset of reversal reaction.

PY - 2018 EP - 1223 T2 - Frontiers in immunology TI - Autophagy impairment is associated with increased inflammasome activation and reversal reaction development in multibacillary leprosy. UR - https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2018.01223/full VL - 9 SN - 1664-3224 ER -