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1 we characterized DCs that were exposed to L. braziliensis.
2 ishmania: Leishmania infantum and Leishmania braziliensis.
3 on a cohort of 62 patients infected with L. braziliensis.
4 eous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis.
5 versus patients with symptomatic CL due to L braziliensis.
6 ging and severe form of disease caused by L. braziliensis.
7 ith Leishmania (Viannia) panamensis and L.V. braziliensis.
8 ctive ulcers and positive PCR for Leishmania braziliensis.
9 sed in light of the present findings with L. braziliensis.
10 risk for CL development caused by Leishmania braziliensis.
11 ed with the prevalent related species L.(V.) braziliensis.
12 d an effective treatment for CL caused by L. braziliensis.
13 reatment of tegumentary disease caused by L. braziliensis.
14 eous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis.
15 bundant in skin lesions caused by Leishmania braziliensis.
16 cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania braziliensis.
17 brucei and to a lesser extent in Leishmania braziliensis.
18 the clinical course of diseases caused by L. braziliensis.
19 to LCTAS, were isolated and mapped onto a L. braziliensis 250 kb multicopy minichromosome and the L.
20 onovani, Leishmania infantum, and Leishmania braziliensis, a capacity to generate intra- and interspe
22 Here we show that ROS inhibits growth of L. braziliensis amastigotes in resting monocytes, and that
23 Monocytes from PBMC were infected with L. braziliensis and cocultured with CD8(+) T cells, and the
24 cases, macrophages were found to take up L. braziliensis and degrade them rapidly in contrast to liv
27 S in the telomeric region differs between L. braziliensis and L. major: in L. major the LCTASs are ta
29 ll RNAs derived from LRV1 in both Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania guyanensis, mapping across b
30 results against Trypnosoma cruzi, Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania infantum were not clinically
31 300 telomere-derived clones from Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania major, a conserved 100 bp se
33 nuclear cells from patients infected with L. braziliensis and reduced IL-1beta levels after cure.
35 cessfully generated axenic amastigotes of L. braziliensis and used them to test the hypothesis that L
36 second Brazilian sample (also exposed to L. braziliensis) and in Iranians infected with Leishmania t
37 Lutzomyia intermedia, a vector of Leishmania braziliensis, and evaluated the seroreactivity in expose
38 hmania (Leishmania) amazonensis, L (Viannia) braziliensis, and L (V) guyanensis] and samples from pat
39 were established, parasites were typed as L. braziliensis, and the presence of LRV1 was determined by
40 th cutaneous leishmaniasis due to Leishmania braziliensis are CD4(+)CD25(-)CD127(-/low)FOXP3(-) cells
44 vidence that photodynamically inactivated L. braziliensis are susceptible to the degradative pathway
46 are of patients with CL caused by Leishmania braziliensis, because screening for and treatment of hel
47 ows that ROS are important for control of L. braziliensis both at the initial stages of infection, as
59 ed Leishmania proteins, Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis-derived Lb8E and Lb6H, and evaluated both i
60 that human patients infected with Leishmania braziliensis develop dysbiotic skin microbiota, characte
61 the first covalent inhibitors of Leishmania braziliensis dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (LbDHODH), a k
62 CL was diagnosed through documentation of L. braziliensis DNA by polymerase chain reaction or identif
64 sions from patients infected with Leishmania braziliensis has been associated with inflammation induc
68 rd Sb v for the treatment of CL caused by L. braziliensis in Brazil and accelerate the healing time o
69 han Sbv for the treatment of CL caused by L. braziliensis in Brazil and accelerates the healing time.
70 eous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis in Brazil with pentavalent antimony (Sb(v))
72 eous leishmaniasis patients infected with L. braziliensis in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, an area where th
75 The chemoattractant factors secreted by L. braziliensis-infected cells were highly efficient in rec
76 wide transcriptional profiling of Leishmania braziliensis-infected cutaneous lesions and normal skin
78 ood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from Leishmania braziliensis-infected human patients have demonstrated t
79 itical for modulating disease outcomes in L. braziliensis-infected mice colonized with S. aureus, giv
80 Tregs in S. aureus-colonized and Leishmania braziliensis-infected mice increased IFN-gamma, S. aureu
81 cytokines and prime naive CD4(+) T cells, L. braziliensis-infected MyD88(-/-) DCs exhibited less acti
82 drug treatment success and disease in 97 L. braziliensis-infected patients from Peru and Bolivia.
85 to rLinB-13 influences disease outcome in L. braziliensis infection and results indicate that positiv
86 We have previously reported that Leishmania braziliensis infection can activate murine dendritic cel
87 of inflammatory mediators in response to L. braziliensis infection contributes to cell recruitment a
88 and used them to test the hypothesis that L. braziliensis infection efficiently triggers innate respo
90 Cutaneous leishmaniasis due to Leishmania braziliensis infection is an inflammatory disease in whi
99 e findings uncover a dual role for DCs in L. braziliensis infection: T cell activation by bystander D
102 eous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis is associated with high levels of tumor nec
103 eous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis is characterized by a single ulcer or multi
104 eous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis is characterized by a strong Th1 response t
108 iasis, caused in South America by Leishmania braziliensis, is difficult to cure by chemotherapy (prim
109 d SC expression associated with 2 primary L. braziliensis isolates from patients with LCL or MCL.
110 east 70-77% of their sterol from leucine; L. braziliensis, L. donovani and L. tropica apparently prod
111 riTrypDB integrates datasets from Leishmania braziliensis, L. infantum, L. major, L. tarentolae, Tryp
112 tro against Leishmania infantum , Leishmania braziliensis , Leishmania guyanensis , Leishmania amazon
113 on approved to treat CL caused by Leishmania braziliensis, Leishmania guyanensis, and Leishmania pana
114 omplexes of New World Leishmania (Leishmania braziliensis, Leishmania mexicana, and Leishmania donova
115 suggest that if local therapy for single L. braziliensis lesions is chosen, this treatment is attrac
126 Importantly, analysis of lesions from L. braziliensis patients revealed that low FOXP3 gene expre
127 upregulated following their loading with L. braziliensis photodynamically inactivated by both strate
130 lected tropical disease caused by Leishmania braziliensis, presents treatment challenges due to varyi
131 braziliensis, LRV-1-positive strains of L.V. braziliensis produced a predominant Th2-biased immune re
132 holog, and an EC(5)(0) of 11 +/- 5 muM in L. braziliensis promastigotes, with no cytotoxicity in THP-
135 onary history of parasites of the Leishmania braziliensis species complex based on whole-genome seque
137 s the human immune response, facilitating L. braziliensis survival in vitro, and increases the risk o
139 oss-protected mice against infection with L. braziliensis that causes mucocutaneous leishmaniasis.
140 he LCTASs are tandemly repeated, while in L. braziliensis the LCTAS is present as a single copy per e
141 .6%) did not have evidence of exposure to L. braziliensis The ratio of infection to disease was 3.2:1
142 in vitro a role for LRV1 in virulence of L. braziliensis, the Leishmania species responsible for the
143 the generation of protective immunity to L. braziliensis, TLR2 seems to have a regulatory role durin
145 nsgenic strategy used previously produced L. braziliensis transfectants, which gave the same phenotyp
147 en 1992 and 1998 in an area where Leishmania braziliensis transmission is endemic; 8 of the patients
149 w that IL-1beta production in response to L. braziliensis was dependent on NLRP3, caspase-1, and casp
150 lied in a second step, on single cells of L. braziliensis, which were sorted by fluorescence activate