| Literature DB >> 29545782 |
Manuel Fresno1,2, Núria Gironès1,2.
Abstract
Chagas disease is a multisystemic disorder caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which affects ~8 million people in Latin America, killing 7,000 people annually. Chagas disease is one of the main causes of death in the endemic area and the leading cause of infectious myocarditis in the world. T. cruzi infection induces two phases, acute and chronic, where the infection is initially asymptomatic and the majority of patients will remain clinically indeterminate for life. However, over a period of 10-30 years, ~30% of infected individuals will develop irreversible, potentially fatal cardiac syndromes (chronic chagasic cardiomyopathy [CCC]), and/or dilatation of the gastro-intestinal tract (megacolon or megaesophagus). Myocarditis is the most serious and frequent manifestation of chronic Chagas heart disease and appears in about 30% of infected individuals several years after infection occurs. Myocarditis is characterized by a mononuclear cell infiltrate that includes different types of myeloid and lymphoid cells and it can occur also in the acute phase. T. cruzi infects and replicates in macrophages and cardiomyocytes as well as in other nucleated cells. The pathogenesis of the chronic phase is thought to be dependent on an immune-inflammatory reaction to a low-grade replicative infection. It is known that cytokines produced by type 1 helper CD4+ T cells are able to control infection. However, the role that infiltrating lymphoid and myeloid cells may play in experimental and natural Chagas disease pathogenesis has not been completely elucidated, and several reports indicate that it depends on the mouse genetic background and parasite strain and/or inoculum. Here, we review the role that T cell CD4+ subsets, myeloid subclasses including myeloid-derived suppressor cells may play in the immunopathogenesis of Chagas disease with special focus on myocarditis, by comparing results obtained with different experimental animal models.Entities:
Keywords: Chagas disease; MDSCs; Th1 cells; Th17 cells; Trypanosoma cruzi; immunoegulation; myocarditis; regulatory T cells
Year: 2018 PMID: 29545782 PMCID: PMC5838393 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.00351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Lymphoid immune responses to T. cruzi infection in different mouse models.
| BALB/c | Y | Heart | Low/Exacerbation | Cuervo et al., | |||
| BALB/c | Y | Heart | Low/Exacerbation | High/Exacerbation | Sanoja et al., | ||
| BALB/c | Tulahuén | Heart Spleen | Neutrophil depletion | Low/Exacerbation | Chen et al., | ||
| BALB/c | Y | Heart | Anti-CD25 | Limited role | Mariano et al., | ||
| BALB/c | H8 Yucatan | Spleen | rSSP4 immunization | rSSP4 specific/Exacerbation | Flores-García et al., | ||
| BALB/c | Y | Spleen Heart | Anti-IL-17 | High/Protective | da Matta Guedes et al., | ||
| BALB/c TS-CD4-Tg | Tulahuén | Spleen | Adoptive transfer of TS specific T cells into RAG KO | High/ Less protection | High/More protection | Cai et al., | |
| C57BL/6 | Y | Heart | High/Protection | Cuervo et al., | |||
| C57BL/6 | Y | Heart | High/Protection | High/Protection | High/Protection | Sanoja et al., | |
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Heart Spleen | Neutrophil depletion | High/Protection | Chen et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Y | Spleen | Osteopontin antibody | High/Protection | High/Protection | Santamaría and Corral, | |
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Spleen | Anti-IL-10 | NA | NA | NA | Silva et al., |
| C57BL/6 | Colombiana | Heart | IL-10 KO | NA | NA | NA | Roffê et al., |
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Thymus periphery | Low/Exacerbation | González et al., | |||
| C57BL/6 | Colombian | Heart | G-CSF treatment | High/Protection | Vasconcelos et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Y | Heart | SOCS2 KO | Low/Protection pathology | Esper et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Liver Heart Spleen | Ebi3 KO (classical Treg cells) | High/Protection | High/Protection | Böhme et al., | |
| C57BL/6 | Y | Heart | Ebi3 KO (Tr1 cells) | High/Protection | Medina et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Spleen | High/Exacerbation | Low/Exacerbation | González et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Spleen | IL-6 KO | NA | NA | NA | Gao and Pereira, |
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Spleen | BATF2 KO | High/Protection | Kitada et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Liver | IL-17A KO | High/Protection | Miyazaki et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Spleen LN Liver | IL-17RA KO | High/Protection | Tosello Boari et al., | ||
| C3H/HeN | RA | Tc52/immunized | High/protection | High/protection | Matos et al., | ||
| C57BL/6 B6.SJL C3H/HeSnJ | Tulahuén | Muscle Brain Gut | Anti-CD25 | Limited role high/protect | Kotner and Tarleton, | ||
| C57BL/6 C3H/HeJ BALB/c | Colombian Y | Heart | Anti-CD25 | Limited role | Sales et al., | ||
| A/J | Brazil | Heart | Anti-CD25 | High/Exacerbation | Bonney et al., | ||
| Swiss Webster | Colombian | Anti-CD25 | High/Exacerbation | Nihei et al., | |||
| C3H | Sylvio X10/4 clone | Heart | G-CSF Benznidazol treatment | Low/Pathology | Medium/Pathology | High/Pathology | González et al., |
Mouse and parasite strain used; organ studied; approach used: infection of deficient mouse strain or knockout (KO), treatment, immunization, cell depletion, or adoptive transfer; Th1/Th2 balance Treg and Th17 responses (high medium or low)/effect (Protection, exacerbation or pathology) and references are indicated.
Myeloid immune responses to T. cruzi infection in mouse models.
| C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Liver Heart Spleen | Ebi3 KO | Low/Exacerbation | Böhme et al., | |
| BALB/c | G | Spleen | IFNg KO iNOS KO iNOS inhibitor | High/Exacerbation | Goñi et al., | |
| BALB/c | Tulahuén | Heart | CD73 inhibitor | High/Protection | Ponce et al., | |
| B6.129S | Tulahuén | Fat | Low/Exacerbation | Cabalén et al., | ||
| BALB/c | Dm28 | PECs | CD8+ apoptotic cells | Low/Exacerbation | Cabral-Piccin et al., | |
| B6.129S | Tulahuén | Heart | IL-6 KO | Low/Exacerbation | Sanmarco et al., | |
| BALB/c | Y | Heart | High/Exacerbation | Cuervo et al., | ||
| BALB/c C57BL/6 | Tulahuén | Spleen Liver | MDSCs inhibitor 5FU | High/Protection | Arocena et al., |
Mouse and parasite strain used; organ studied; approach used: infection of deficient mouse strain or knockout (KO), treatment, immunization, cell depletion, or adoptive transfer; M1/M2 balance and MDSCs responses/effect and references are indicated. Peritoneal macrophage (PECs).
Figure 1Proposed model for susceptibility to T. cruzi infection. (A) In the non-susceptible scenario, Treg cells allow a balanced Th1/Th2 immune response, able to control parasite replication by Th1/M1 response than later shifts to Th2/M2 for resolution of inflammation and healing damaged tissues; Th17 cells play a protective role. (B) In the susceptible context the lack of Treg cells conduces to an unbalanced immune response were MDSCs expand and consume L-arginine pools, that together with high levels of ADMA, inhibit NO production by iNOS losing the control of parasite replication; there is also expansion of pathogenic Th17. The size of the different cells (colored circles with names) denotes the magnitude of their expansion. Green arrows indicate activation. Red arrows indicate suppression/inhibition.