Project 2 """"""""Studies of the sand fly vector"""""""" will challenge some of the dogma's guiding current vector and diseases control efforts for Visceral Leishmaniasis (VL). Phlebotomus argentipes, the sand fly vector of Leishmania donovani, is assumed to be a poor flyer that breeds and rests mainly indoor and bites around midnight;vector control efforts are planned based on assumptions about the seasonality of sand fly abundance.
The first aim of this study is to provide an accurate description of seasonal variation in vector abundance, feeding preferences, biting times and an estimate of the seasonal variation in the proportion of vectors infected with L. donovani. To be able to target not just the adult sand flies but also the earlier stages, the study also includes a component aimed at identifying breeding sites of P. argentipes. Coverage with indoor residual insecticide spraying (IRS), the main P. argentipes control method on the Indian subcontinent, was shown to be grossly inadequate in an eartier phase of the TMRC study. In this project reasons for low IRS coverage will be investigated through qualitative and quantitative research. In addition a sand fly saliva antibody test will be developed, this test is expected to provide a direct measure of vector exposure at the level of the individual. This new method can be used to monitor the effectiveness of vector control efforts, obviating the need of costly and cumbersome vector abundance studies. Another assumption this project will challenge is the assumption that only symptomatic patients and patients with post Kala Azar dermal Leishmaniasis (PKDL) are infectious to the sand fly vector. The number of VL cases in the current TMRC study area is so low that mathematically it seems unlikely they can sustain transmission;the number of asymptomatically infected persons however is much higher. The project will study the infectivity of asymptomatically infected persons to sand flies by conducting targeted xenodiagnosis experiments.

Public Health Relevance

Though vector control is among the few strategies with proven effectiveness in VL control, current efforts are not yielding good results. This project will generate data that can be used to readjust the current vector control schemes as well as a tool to monitor their effectiveness. If asymptomatically infected persons can transmit VL, current VL control strategies need to be revised. This project will search for evidence.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
5P50AI074321-08
Application #
8711199
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2014-08-01
Budget End
2015-07-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2014
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Banaras Hindu University
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Varanasi
State
Country
India
Zip Code
221005
Sundar, Shyam; Singh, Anup (2018) Chemotherapeutics of visceral leishmaniasis: present and future developments. Parasitology 145:481-489
Sundar, Shyam; Singh, Bhawana (2018) Emerging therapeutic targets for treatment of leishmaniasis. Expert Opin Ther Targets 22:467-486
Sundar, Shyam; Singh, Bhawana (2018) Understanding Leishmania parasites through proteomics and implications for the clinic. Expert Rev Proteomics 15:371-390
Sundar, Shyam; Agarwal, Dipti (2018) Visceral Leishmaniasis-Optimum Treatment Options in Children. Pediatr Infect Dis J 37:492-494
Singh, Neetu; Sundar, Shyam (2018) Combined neutralization of interferon gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha induces IL-4 production but has no direct additive impact on parasite burden in splenic cultures of human visceral leishmaniasis. PLoS One 13:e0199817
Singh, Neetu; Kumar, Rajiv; Chauhan, Shashi Bhushan et al. (2018) Peripheral Blood Monocytes With an Antiinflammatory Phenotype Display Limited Phagocytosis and Oxidative Burst in Patients With Visceral Leishmaniasis. J Infect Dis 218:1130-1141
Singh, Toolika; Fakiola, Michaela; Oommen, Joyce et al. (2018) Epitope-Binding Characteristics for Risk versus Protective DRB1 Alleles for Visceral Leishmaniasis. J Immunol 200:2727-2737
Kelly, Patrick H; Bahr, Sarah M; Serafim, Tiago D et al. (2017) The Gut Microbiome of the Vector Lutzomyia longipalpis Is Essential for Survival of Leishmania infantum. MBio 8:
Sharma, Smriti; Srivastva, Shweta; Davis, Richard E et al. (2017) The Phenotype of Circulating Neutrophils during Visceral Leishmaniasis. Am J Trop Med Hyg 97:767-770
Kansal, S; Chakravarty, J; Kumar, A et al. (2017) Risk Factors associated with defaulting from visceral leishmaniasis treatment: analysis under routine programme conditions in Bihar, India. Trop Med Int Health 22:1037-1042

Showing the most recent 10 out of 90 publications