| Literature DB >> 32218784 |
Stefan Magez1,2,3, Joar Esteban Pinto Torres3, Emmanuel Obishakin1,4, Magdalena Radwanska1,5.
Abstract
Salivarian trypanosomes are extracellular parasites that affect humans, livestock, and game animals around the world. Through co-evolution with the mammalian immune system, trypanosomes have developed defense mechanisms that allow them to thrive in blood, lymphoid vessels, and tissue environments such as the brain, the fat tissue, and testes. Trypanosomes have developed ways to circumvent antibody-mediated killing and block the activation of the lytic arm of the complement pathway. Hence, this makes the innate immune control of the infection a crucial part of the host-parasite interaction, determining infection susceptibility, and parasitemia control. Indeed, trypanosomes use a combination of several independent mechanisms to avoid clearance by the humoral immune system. First, perpetuated antigenic variation of the surface coat allows to escape antibody-mediated elimination. Secondly, when antibodies bind to the coat, they are efficiently transported toward the endocytosis pathway, where they are removed from the coat proteins. Finally, trypanosomes engage in the active destruction of the mammalian humoral immune response. This provides them with a rescue solution in case antigenic variation does not confer total immunological invisibility. Both antigenic variation and B cell destruction pose significant hurdles for the development of anti-trypanosome vaccine strategies. However, developing total immune escape capacity and unlimited growth capabilities within a mammalian host is not beneficial for any parasite, as it will result in the accelerated death of the host itself. Hence, trypanosomes have acquired a system of quorum sensing that results in density-dependent population growth arrest in order to prevent overpopulating the host. The same system could possibly sense the infection-associated host tissue damage resulting from inflammatory innate immune responses, in which case the quorum sensing serves to prevent excessive immunopathology and as such also promotes host survival. In order to put these concepts together, this review summarizes current knowledge on the interaction between trypanosomes and the mammalian innate immune system, the mechanisms involved in population growth regulation, antigenic variation and the immuno-destructive effect of trypanosomes on the humoral immune system. Vaccine trials and a discussion on the role of innate immune modulation in these trials are discussed at the end.Entities:
Keywords: antibody; cytokine; immunosuppression; innate immunity; trypanosomes
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32218784 PMCID: PMC7078162 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Summary of vaccine candidates reported in literature.
| Intra-muscular | Parasite isolated | 3/cattle | 14 days or more | Natural exposure | Partial protection | ( | |
| I.p. | Parasite isolated | 3/mouse (Balb/c) | 3 weeks | 500–103 | Partial/no protection | ( | |
| I.p. | Recombinant protein | 3/mouse (C57bl/6) | 11 days | 104 | No protection | ( | |
| I.p. | Plasmid DNA | 1/mouse (Balb/c) | 175 days | 500 | Partial protection | ( | |
| I.p. | Recombinant protein | 3/mouse (Balb/c) | 6 weeks | 106 | No protection | ( | |
| Sub-cutaneous | Parasite isolated | 3/mouse (no strain indication) | Not indicated | 103-105 | Partial (cross-species) protection | ( | |
| Sub-cutaneous | Recombinant protein | 3/mouse (Balb/c) | 6 days | 103 | Partial (cross-species) protection | ( | |
| Intra-muscular | Plasmid DNA | 2/mouse (Swiss albino) | 35 days | 103 | No protection | ( | |
| Sub-cutaneous | Recombinant protein | 2/mouse (Swiss albino) | 14 days | 103 | No protection | ( | |
| Sub-cutaneous | Recombinant protein | 3/mouse (Balb/c) | 6 days | 103 | Partial (cross-species) protection | ( | |
| Sub-cutaneous | Recombinant protein | 4/cattle (Boran) | 1 month | Tsetse bite | Improved recovery | ( | |
| Intra-muscular | Plasmid DNA | 1/mouse (Balb/c) | 175 days | 500 | Partial protection | ( | |
| I.p. | Recombinant protein | 4/mouse (Balb/c) | 10–14 days | 104 | Partial protection | ( | |
| I.p. | GPI-Liposomes | 2/mice (C57bl/6 and KOs) | 3 weeks | 5 × 103 | Cross-species anti-pathology | ( |
I.p., intraperitoneal; FP, Flagellar Pocket; ISG, Invariant Surface Glycoprotein; GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol; CP, Cystein proease.
Summary of the detrimental effect of trypanosomosis in non-related vaccines, B cells, and B cell malignancies.
| Mouse | CFU counts | Increased lung CFUs | Loss of vaccine protection | ( | ||
| Human | HIV | Ab titers Diagnostic test | Decrease in specificity | NA | ( | |
| Human | Measles | Ab titers Diagnostic test | Decreased titers | NA | ( | |
| Cattle | CBPP | Ab titers/experimental infection | Decreased titers | 50% susceptibility | ( | |
| Cattle/mice | Louping-ill virus | Ab titers | 90% titer reduction | NA | ( | |
| Cattle | Foot-and-mouth virus | Ab titer | Decreased titers | Virus challenge/no effect on protection | ( | |
| Cattle | Ab titers | 80–90% titer reduction ( | NA | ( | ||
| Buffalo | Ab titers/inflammation | Decreased titers | NA | ( | ||
| Buffalo | Ab titers/lymphocyte proliferation | Decreased titers immuno-suppression | NA | ( | ||
| Pig | Classic Swine Fever (CSF) | Ab titer/fever | Decreased titers | Decreased fever | ( | |
| Mouse | Ab titers/eosinophil counts lymphocyte proliferation | Decreased titers immuno-suppression | Decreased worm expulsion | ( | ||
| Mouse | Parasite count | Short-lived specific protection | Loss of short-lived protection | ( |
NA, None applicable.
Figure 1Overview of the crucial aspects of trypanosome-host interactions. Upon infection, trypanosomes are confronted with an early stage inflammatory immune response in which IFNγ is being produced by NK, NKT and subsequently CD4+ T cells. This drives the activation of macrophages which in term respond to parasite secreted and released factors, including shedded VSG (Variant Surface Glycoprotein). Activated macrophages produce TNF and Nitric Oxide (NO) that negatively impact on parasite fitness. Antibodies, derived first through T cell independent B cell activation and later through T cell dependent activation, will attack the surface of the trypanosome. Deposition of the C3b complement will also occur. Together, these immune molecules will help in controlling parasitemia, but trypanosomes themselves have defense mechanisms that will help survival. Through lateral VSG movement to the flagellar pocket (FP) antibodies and complement factors are cleared, limiting damage. In order to prevent early killing of the host through parasite overpopulation, trypanosomes have developed quorum sensing, which results in density dependent growth arrest and preparation for vector transmission. Combined, this innate control of infection results in prolonged inflammation with a detrimental outcome for the adaptive immune response. Late stage infections are characterized by B cell destruction, T cell mediated immune suppression, loss of B cell memory recall capacity and irrelevant polyclonal B cell activation.