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1.
Chagas disease is a life-threatening disorder caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. Parasite-specific antibodies, CD8+ T cells, as well as IFN-γ and nitric oxide (NO) are key elements of the adaptive and innate immunity against the extracellular and intracellular forms of the parasite. Bim is a potent pro-apoptotic member of the Bcl-2 family implicated in different aspects of the immune regulation, such as negative selection of self-reactive thymocytes and elimination of antigen-specific T cells at the end of an immune response. Interestingly, the role of Bim during infections remains largely unidentified. To explore the role of Bim in Chagas disease, we infected WT, Bim+/−, Bim−/− mice with trypomastigotes forms of the Y strain of T. cruzi. Strikingly, our data revealed that Bim−/− mice exhibit a delay in the development of parasitemia followed by a deficiency in the control of parasite load in the bloodstream and a decreased survival compared to WT and Bim+/− mice. At the peak of parasitemia, peritoneal macrophages of Bim−/− mice exhibit decreased NO production, which correlated with a decrease in the pro-inflammatory Small Peritoneal Macrophage (SPM) subset. A similar reduction in NO secretion, as well as in the pro-inflammatory cytokines IFN-γ and IL-6, was also observed in Bim−/− splenocytes. Moreover, an impaired anti-T. cruzi CD8+ T-cell response was found in Bim−/− mice at this time point. Taken together, our results suggest that these alterations may contribute to the establishment of a delayed yet enlarged parasitic load observed at day 9 after infection of Bim−/− mice and place Bim as an important protein in the control of T. cruzi infections.Subject terms: Cell death and immune response, Infectious diseases  相似文献   

2.
Francisella tularensis subspecies (subsp.) tularensis is a CDC Category A biological warfare agent and inhalation of as few as 15 bacilli can initiate severe disease. Relatively little is known about the cellular and molecular mechanisms of host defense against respiratory infection with subsp. tularensis. In this study, we examined the role of neutrophils and NADPH phagocyte oxidase in host resistance to pulmonary infection in a mouse intranasal infection model. We found that despite neutrophil recruitment to the lungs and increased concentrations of neutrophil-chemotactic chemokines (KC, MIP-2 and RANTES) in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid following intranasal inoculation of the pathogen, neither depletion of neutrophils nor enhancement of their recruitment into the lungs had any impact on bacterial burdens or survival rate/time. Nevertheless, mice deficient in NADPH phagocyte oxidase (gp91(phox?/?)) did exhibit higher tissue and blood bacterial burdens and succumbed to infection one day earlier than wild-type C57BL/6 mice. These results imply that although neutrophils are not a major effector cell in defense against subsp. tularensis infection, NADPH phagocyte oxidase does play a marginal role.  相似文献   

3.
The inflammatory response that follows the infection with Trypanosoma cruzi is essential for host resistance to infection but is also responsible for the diverse pathology observed in Chagas disease. Here, we examine the stimuli and mechanisms underlying chemokine production following infection in vitro and in vivo, and the ability of chemokines to coordinate the influx of inflammatory and immune cells to the site of parasite infection, and to control T. cruzi growth.  相似文献   

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In order to study the role of endogenous IFN-gamma in Trypanosoma cruzi infection in mice, a potent murine IFN-gamma-specific mAb was injected i.p. on days -1, 7, and 14, relative to infection. Irrespective of the parasite inocula (100 or 25,000), groups of antibody-treated mice had significantly greater cumulative mortality rates than did appropriate controls. In antibody-treated mice, mean survival times were also significantly shorter, and maximum mean parasitemia levels were significantly higher, than in controls. Moreover, the number of amastigote nests in tissues was higher than in control mice and attained a maximum at the same time as parasitemia. As evident from kinetic studies of neutralizing activity, injected mAb were rapidly consumed in infected, but not in noninfected, mice, which is suggestive of massive IFN-gamma production during the early parasitemic phase of the disease. Nevertheless, IFN-gamma remained undetectable in the sera of infected but untreated mice. Unexpectedly, however, a peak of IFN-like antiviral activity, characterizable as a mixture of IFN-gamma and IFN-beta, appeared in mAb-treated mice that survived to infection at a time when neutralizing activity of injected mAb had drastically decreased in the circulation. We hypothesize that this high level of artificially induced endogenous IFN-gamma, not neutralized by the amounts of injected mAb, was due to the more intense parasite multiplication occurring in mAb-treated mice, which in turn may have induced an increased amount of various cytokines. TNF-alpha was not found in the serum of our mice. The humoral immune response entered its exponential phase at a time point later than that when protection by endogenous IFN-gamma was evident. Treatment with IFN-gamma-specific antibody, as applied in our study, failed to affect the level of different Ig isotypes or of T. cruzi-specific antibodies. Our study clearly indicates that IFN-gamma is produced early in acute T. cruzi infection and exerts a protective effect that is probably independent from the humoral immune response.  相似文献   

7.
Infection with Trypanosoma cruzi results in the development of both type 1 and type 2 patterns of cytokine responses during acute and chronic stages of infection. To investigate the role of Th1 and Th2 subsets of CD4(+) T cells in determining the outcome of T. cruzi infection in mice, we have developed T. cruzi clones that express OVA and have used OVA-specific TCR-transgenic T cells to generate OVA-specific Th1 and Th2 cells. BALB/c mice receiving 10(7) OVA-specific Th1 cells and then challenged with OVA-expressing T. cruzi G-OVA.GPI showed significantly lower parasitemia and increased survival in comparison to mice that received no cells. In contrast, recipients of OVA-specific Th2 cells developed higher parasitemias, exhibited higher tissue parasitism and inflammation, and had higher mortality than recipients of Th1 cells after infection with T. cruzi G-OVA.GPI. Mice receiving a mixture of both Th1 and Th2 OVA-specific cells also were not protected from lethal challenge. The protective effect of the OVA-specific Th1 cells was OVA dependent as shown by the fact that transfer of OVA-specific Th1 or Th2 cells failed to alter the course of infection or disease in mice challenged with wild-type T. cruzi. Immunohistochemical analysis of OVA-specific Th1 and Th2 cells at 4, 15, and 30 days postinfection revealed the persistence and expansion of these cells in mice challenged with T. cruzi G-OVA.GPI but not in mice infected with wild-type T. cruzi. We conclude that transfer of Ag-specific Th1 cells but not Th2 cells protect mice from a lethal infection with T. cruzi.  相似文献   

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In this study, we examined the tissue specificity of inflammatory and oxidative responses and mitochondrial dysfunction in mice infected by Trypanosoma cruzi. In acute mice, parasite burden and associated inflammatory infiltrate was detected in all tissues (skeletal muscle>heart>stomach>colon). The extent of oxidative damage and mitochondrial decay was in the order of heart>stomach>skeletal muscle>colon. In chronic mice, a low level of parasite burden and inflammation continued in all tissues; however, oxidant overload and mitochondrial inefficiency mainly persisted in the heart tissue (also detectable in stomach). Further, we noted an unvaryingly high degree of oxidative stress, compromised antioxidant status, and decreased mitochondrial respiratory complex activities in peripheral blood of infected mice. A pair-wise log analysis showed a strong positive correlation in the heart-versus-blood (but not other tissues) levels of oxidative stress markers (malonyldialdehyde, glutathione disulfide), antioxidants (superoxide dismutase, MnSOD, catalase), and mitochondrial inhibition of respiratory complexes (CI/CIII) in infected mice. T. cruzi-induced acute inflammatory and oxidative responses are widespread in different muscle tissues. Antioxidant/oxidant status and mitochondrial function are consistently attenuated in the heart, and reflected in the peripheral-blood of T. cruzi-infected mice. Our results provide an impetus to investigate the peripheral-blood oxidative responses in relation to clinical severity of heart disease in chagasic human patients.  相似文献   

10.
Protective immunity to the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi in mice depends on a pro-inflammatory T cell response involving the production of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). In conjunction with interleukin-12 (IL-12), IL-18 promotes the synthesis of IFN-gamma and a T helper type 1 immune response. We investigated the requirements of IL-12 and IL-18 in murine T. cruzi infection by use of C57BL/6 mice genetically deficient in either cytokine. IL-12p40(-/-) mice succumbed to infection at doses of 100 parasites, whereas IL-18(-/-) and wild-type mice resisted infectious doses up to 1000 parasites to the same extent. Levels of parasitemia were comparable between the latter groups, as were tissue parasite burdens according to quantitative real-time PCR. In contrast, IL-12p40(-/-) mice displayed vastly increased levels of parasites both in blood and in tissue. IFN-gamma concentrations in the serum of infected mice and in supernatants of splenocytes stimulated in vitro were decreased in IL-18(-/-) mice, whereas in IL-12p40(-/-) mice, IFN-gamma was undetectable in the serum and drastically reduced in cell supernatants. Levels of IL-12 production were generally comparable between wild-type and IL-18(-/-) mice, as were levels of IL-4, IL-2 and nitric oxide. Thus, the requirement for endogenous pro-inflammatory cytokines for a protective murine immune response against T. cruzi is satisfied by the expression of IL-12, while IL-18 is dispensable.  相似文献   

11.
Selenium is an essential trace element and its deficiency was implicated in heart diseases. We recently showed low Se levels in chronic chagasic patients with cardiomyopathy. Herein, mice were depleted in Se by feeding the mothers with chow containing only 0.005 mg Se/kg and maintaining this diet for offspring, that were further infected with Trypanosoma cruzi. Survival rate was significantly lower in Se deficient than in control mice. Parasitemia was similar in all groups. Necrotic heart lesions were found after infection (high CK-MB levels). No outbreaks of parasite growth were detected in chronic survivors submitted or not to a second Se depletion. The present results confirm our hypothesis that a nutritional deficiency in Se is associated to a higher mortality during T. cruzi infection. The potential beneficial effect of Se supplementation is a perspective. Hypothesis to explain the higher susceptibility of Se-depleted mice to T. cruzi infection are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
In murine infection with Trypanosoma cruzi, immune responsiveness to parasite and non-parasite Ag becomes suppressed during the acute phase of infection, and this suppression is known to extend to the production of IL-2. To determine whether suppression of lymphokine production was specific for IL-2, or was a generalized phenomenon involving suppressed production of other lymphokines, we have begun an investigation of the ability of mice to produce of a number of lymphokines during infection, initially addressing this question by studying IFN-gamma production. Supernatants from Con A-stimulated spleen cells from infected resistant (C57B1/6) and susceptible (C3H) mice were assayed for IFN-gamma. Supernatants known to be suppressed with respect to IL-2 production from both mouse strains contained IFN-gamma at or above that of supernatants from normal spleen cells. Samples were assayed in an IFN bioassay to ensure that the IFN-gamma detected by ELISA was biologically active. Thus, suppression during T. cruzi infection does not extend to the production of all lymphokines. The stimulation of IFN-gamma production was confirmed by detection of IFN-gamma mRNA in unstimulated spleen cells from infected animals, and in Con A, Con A + PMA, and in some cases, parasite Ag-stimulated spleen cells from infected animals. IFN-gamma mRNA levels in mitogen-stimulated spleen cells equalled or exceeded those found in similarly stimulated normal cells. In contrast, stimulated spleen cells from infected animals had reduced levels of IL-2 mRNA relative to normal spleen cells. Thus at both the protein and mRNA level, IFN-gamma production is stimulated by T. cruzi infection, whereas IL-2 production is suppressed. Serum IFN-gamma in infected C57B1/6 and C3H mice was detected 8 days after infection, peaked on day 20 of infection, and subsequently fell, but remained detectable at low levels throughout the life of infected mice. Infected animals were depleted of cell populations known to be capable of producing IFN-gamma, and Thy-1+, CD4-, CD8-, NK- cells, and to a lesser degree, CD4+ and CD8+ cells were found to be responsible for the production of IFN-gamma during infection. We also report that IL-2 can induce IFN-gamma production in vitro and in vivo by spleen cells from infected animals, and that IL-2 can synergize with epimastigote or trypomastigote antigen to produce high levels of IFN-gamma comparable to those found in supernatants from mitogen-stimulated cells.  相似文献   

13.
Suppression of host lymphoproliferative responses to mitogens and Ag is characteristically seen during acute infection with the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. We investigated the reciprocal regulation of prostaglandins (PG), TNF-alpha, and nitric oxide (NO) production and their effects on cytokine production and lymphoproliferative responses to parasite Ag and to Con A by spleen cells (SC) from T.-cruzi-infected mice. Large amounts of PGE2, TNF-alpha, and NO were produced during infection. TNF-alpha stimulated PG and NO synthesis, while both mediators inhibited TNF-alpha synthesis. Blocking PG also reduced NO synthesis indicating that PG stimulate NO production. Treatment with indomethacin or NMLA stimulated lymphoproliferation on days 6 and 22 of infection; on day 14, when suppression of proliferation and NO production was maximal, combined inhibition of NO and PG production restored parasite Ag specific and Con A proliferative responses. Blocking PG or NO production increased IL-2, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha, but not IL-12 production by SC; IL-10 levels were not reduced. Indomethacin-treated infected mice had higher mortality compared to untreated infected animals. The data indicate that PG, together with NO and TNF-alpha, participate in a complex circuit that controls lymphoproliferative and cytokine responses in T. cruzi infection.  相似文献   

14.
The extent of parasite proliferation following completion of the first cycle of intracellular replication was significantly higher in CD-1 nu/nu mice and in irradiated mice compared to other, including highly susceptible, mouse strains. A control of parasite proliferation thus occurs in normal mice as early as the first cycle of intracellular replication. The thymus dependency and radiation sensitivity of the early control of proliferation of Trypanosoma cruzi suggest that an immune response to the parasite is involved in the early control of proliferation. The BXH-2 recombinant inbred strain demonstrated an inability to control early proliferation and, 4-5 days after infection, had parasitemias several times higher than those observed in susceptible mouse strains. The BXH-2 strain appears to lack the early control mechanism. When the extent of proliferation of T. cruzi at completion of the first cycle of intracellular replication was compared in inbred strains of mice having varying levels of resistance to the parasite, the extent of proliferation correlated with host resistance, being lowest in the most resistant strains (C57BL/6, SJL) and highest in the most susceptible strains (C3H, A). It is suggested that the mechanism(s) controlling early parasite proliferation may be of primary importance as the basis for host resistance.  相似文献   

15.
The autoantibodies induced in (C57BL/6 x BALB/c)F1 mice during Trypanosoma cruzi (CL strain) infection were analyzed and compared with natural autoantibodies present in healthy mice. Mice were killed at intervals after infection and their sera were tested by enzyme immunoassay against a panel of self- and non-self-Ag: actin, myoglobin, myosin, tubulin, DNA, and TNP-OVA. The level of IgM and IgG autoantibodies against all Ag started to increase from day 15 until 6 wk after the parasite infection. The high level of all autoantibodies persisted 3 mo postinfection, and 1 yr later, half of the mice still had elevated levels of IgM and IgG autoantibodies, particularly antitubulin IgG antibodies. IgM and IgG were isolated from pools of normal and infected mouse sera and their binding capacity to all Ag was compared. The titers of infected mouse sera were increased and the slopes of both IgM and IgG binding curves of autoantibodies to actin, myosin, and tubulin were greater than those of control mouse sera, indicating higher affinities. The average dissociation constant of the IgG2a autoantibody to mouse tubulin was 5 times lower than that of natural antitubulin IgG2a antibodies. Furthermore, absorption of the IgG from infected mouse sera onto a tubulin immunoadsorbent removed half the reactivity with tubulin and also with myosin, actin and parasite extracts. The eluted antibodies bound the same Ag. When IgG were further analyzed by Western blot on proteolytic fragments of tubulin, we found that antibodies from both groups bound to the same broad spectrum of polypeptide bands. However, additional fragments were recognized by antibodies from infected mice. All these results indicate that the autoantibodies naturally present in mice are significantly affected after infection with T. cruzi, in quantity as well as in specificity and affinity.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Trypanosoma brucei brucei infects livestock, with severe effects in horses and dogs. Mouse strains differ greatly in susceptibility to this parasite. However, no genes controlling these differences were mapped.

Methods

We studied the genetic control of survival after T. b. brucei infection using recombinant congenic (RC) strains, which have a high mapping power. Each RC strain of BALB/c-c-STS/A (CcS/Dem) series contains a different random subset of 12.5% genes from the parental “donor” strain STS/A and 87.5% genes from the “background” strain BALB/c. Although BALB/c and STS/A mice are similarly susceptible to T. b. brucei, the RC strain CcS-11 is more susceptible than either of them. We analyzed genetics of survival in T. b. brucei-infected F2 hybrids between BALB/c and CcS-11. CcS-11 strain carries STS-derived segments on eight chromosomes. They were genotyped in the F2 hybrid mice and their linkage with survival was tested by analysis of variance.

Results

We mapped four Tbbr (Trypanosoma brucei brucei response) loci that influence survival after T. b. brucei infection. Tbbr1 (chromosome 3) and Tbbr2 (chromosome 12) have effects on survival independent of inter-genic interactions (main effects). Tbbr3 (chromosome 7) influences survival in interaction with Tbbr4 (chromosome 19). Tbbr2 is located on a segment 2.15 Mb short that contains only 26 genes.

Conclusion

This study presents the first identification of chromosomal loci controlling susceptibility to T. b. brucei infection. While mapping in F2 hybrids of inbred strains usually has a precision of 40–80 Mb, in RC strains we mapped Tbbr2 to a 2.15 Mb segment containing only 26 genes, which will enable an effective search for the candidate gene. Definition of susceptibility genes will improve the understanding of pathways and genetic diversity underlying the disease and may result in new strategies to overcome the active subversion of the immune system by T. b. brucei.  相似文献   

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Resolution of Leishmania infection is T cell-dependent, and B lymphocytes have been considered to play a minimal role in host defense. In this study, the contribution of B lymphocytes to the response against Leishmania donovani was investigated using genetically modified IgM transmembrane domain (muMT) mutant mice, which lack mature B lymphocytes. When compared with wild-type mice, muMT mice cleared parasites more rapidly from the liver, and infection failed to establish in the spleen. The rapid clearance of parasites in muMT mice was associated with accelerated and more extensive hepatic granuloma formation compared with wild-type mice. However, the liver of infected muMT mice also showed signs of destructive pathology, associated with the presence of increased numbers of neutrophils. The role of neutrophils in controlling parasite growth in the viscera was determined by depletion with the mAb RB6-8C5. This treatment led to a dramatic enhancement of parasite growth in both the liver and spleen of muMT and wild-type mice. As assessed by transfer of both normal and chronic-infection serum, Ig protects microMT mice from destructive hepatic pathology, but minimally alters their resistance compared with wild-type mice. However, adoptive transfer of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells into recombinase activating gene 1 (RAG1-/-) recipients, suggested that T cell function was not altered by maturation in a B cell-deficient environment. Taken together, these data suggest an inhibitory role for B lymphocytes in resistance to L. donovani unrelated to the presence or absence of Ig. However, Ig protects muMT mice from the exaggerated pathology that occurs during infection.  相似文献   

20.
Inbred strains of mice inoculated with the T cruzi Y strain behaved as susceptible (A/J, C3H/HeN), intermediate (BALB/c) or relatively resistant (C57BL/6) with respect to the magnitude of parasitaemia and mortality rate. C57BL/10 mice were susceptible in relation to parasitaemia but resistant when mortality was analyzed. Infection with T cruzi CL strain presented the same results, except for C57BL/6 which behaved as susceptible mice. Athymic mice of various backgrounds revealed no differences in susceptibility, presenting the same dramatic parasitaemia, tissue colonization pattern and no inflammatory reaction in any of the tissues studied. Infection of euthymic and athymic BALB/c mice elicited the production of parasite-specific antibodies, which reached similar levels on the first 9 days but differed after day 13. Serum transfer experiments in BALB/c mice did not show great differences in parasitaemia but altered T. cruzi polymorphism reducing the slender forms in athymic mice. Histopathology of athymic BALB/c mice showed the same tissue tropism when infected either with T cruzi Y or CL strain.  相似文献   

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