Trypanosoma cruzi: Lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes and infections in mice |
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Authors: | Teresa I Mercado |
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Institution: | Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Bethesda, Maryland 20014, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Total plasma LDH isoenzyme (EC 1.1.1.27) levels increased significantly over the normal level in mice infected with strains of Trypanosoma cruzi from three different geographic locations, but some strain differences were observed. The most rapid increase was exhibited by the blood-induced Tulahuen strain, but this strain, unlike the House 510 or House 11, did not elicit an increase during the early period of infection. Overall increases in LDH-1 and LDH-2, heart isoenzymes, were most marked in vector-derived House 510 infections, but, as in the Tulahuen strain, a considerable increase was also observed in blood-induced infections. The House 510 strain also elicited significant increases in LDH-4; these were particularly high during the early period of the blood-induced infection. By contrast, the vector-derived Tulahuen strain elicited a higher increase in LDH-4 during the early period than the House 510 or House 11 strains. Comparable similarites and differences were also observed in regard to LDH-3, 5, and “X.” The most marked isoenzyme increases were those of “LDH-X” exhibited by the blood-induced House 510 and vector-derived Tulahuen strains.Parallel histopathologic studies of liver, heart, and skeletal muscle disclosed significant pathology in all the infections. Animals with blood-induced Tulahuen strain infections characteristically showed extensive necrosis with marked multiplication of parasites throughout the liver, but little or no evident damage to the heart and skeleal muscle. Animals infected with House 510 and House 11 strains exhibited minimal pathology in the liver but severe damage to the heart and skeletal muscle. Increases in LDH-4 and LDH-5, isoenzymes which represent both liver and skeletal muscle, in blood-induced Tulahuen infections were attributed largely to liver damage, but in the House 510 and House 11 infections were related more to skeletal muscle. |
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Keywords: | Chagas' disease Parasite strains Blood-induced infections Vector-derived infections Lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes (EC 1 1 1 27) Mice Plasma Liver Heart Skeletal muscle Disc electrophoresis Densitometry Planimetry Histochemical staining Histopathology |
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