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Trichobilharzia regenti: host immune response in the pathogenesis of neuroinfection in mice
Authors:Lichtenbergová Lucie  Lassmann Hans  Jones Malcolm K  Kolářová Libuše  Horák Petr
Institution:aDepartment of Parasitology, Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague, Vini?ná 7, 128 44 Prague 2, Czech Republic;bDepartment of Microbiology, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague, Ruská 87, 100 00 Prague 10, Czech Republic;cDepartment of Neuroimmunology, Center for Brain Research, Medical University of Vienna, Spitalgasse 4, 1090 Vienna, Austria;dUniversity of Queensland, School of Veterinary Sciences, Gatton, Queensland 4343, Australia;eQueensland Institute of Medical Research, Herston, Queensland 4006, Australia;fInstitute of Immunology and Microbiology of the First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague and General University Hospital, Studni?kova 7, 128 00 Prague 2, Czech Republic
Abstract:Besides their natural bird hosts, Trichobilharzia regenti cercariae are able to penetrate skin of mammals, including humans. Experimental infections of mice showed that schistosomula of this species are able to avoid the immune response in skin of their non-specific mammalian host and escape the skin to migrate to the CNS. Schistosomula do not mature in mammals, but can survive in nervous tissue for several days post infection. Neuroinfections of specific bird hosts as well as accidental mammalian hosts can lead to neuromotor effects, for example, leg paralysis and thus this parasite serves as a model of parasite invasion of the CNS.Here, we show by histological and immunohistochemical investigation of CNS invasion of immunocompetent (BALB/c) and immunodeficient (SCID) mice by T. regenti schistosomula that the presence of parasites in the nervous tissue initiated an influx of immune cells, activation of microglia, astrocytes and development of inflammatory lesions. Schistosomula elimination in the tissue depended on the host immune status. In the absence of CD3+ T-cells in immunodeficient SCID mice, parasite destruction was slower than that in immunocompetent BALB/c mice. Axon injury and subsequent secondary demyelination in the CNS were associated with mechanical damage due to migration of schistosomula through the nervous tissue, and not by host immune processes. Immunoreactivity of the parasite intestinal content for specific antigens of oligodendrocytes/myelin and neurofilaments showed for the first time that schistosomula ingest the nervous tissue components during their migration.
Keywords:Trichobilharzia regenti  Schistosomes  Helminth  CNS infection  Inflammation
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