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  • Title: [Role of Langerhans cells in the immunity of leishmaniasis].
    Author: Zuluaga M, Robledo SM.
    Journal: Biomedica; 2004 Sep; 24(3):302-17. PubMed ID: 15551883.
    Abstract:
    Immune response induced against Leishmania parasites is influenced by several factors, one of the most important being the type of Antigen Presenting Cell (APC). Langerhans cells, a subpopulation of APC, are sentinel cells for detecting invader microorganisms; they reside in skin tissues at levels where the phlebotomine fly vector inoculates Leishmania parasites. Presence of microorganisms can induce activation of Langerhans cells, leading to their maturation and migration towards lymph nodes. There, Langerhans cells present antigens to T cells for their subsequent activation and specific differentiation into effector cells. Early after a Leishmania infection, few T cells have been observed at sites of infection, suggesting that infected macrophages have little opportunity to locate T cells specific for elimination of Leishmania parasites. However, Langerhans cells may be the cells available to provide signals for the stimulation of parasite-specific T-cell responses in the lymph node and for inducing T-cell migration to the infected skin. Herein, the main characteristics of Langerhans cells are reviewed, with special emphasis on their participation in cutaneous inflammatory response. The role of these cells in infections caused by protozoan parasites of the Leishmania genus is discussed.
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