An Animal Model of Acute and Chronic Chagas Disease With the Reticulotropic Y Strain of Trypanosoma cruzi That Depicts the Multifunctionality and Dysfunctionality of T Cells

Chagas disease (ChD), a complex and persistent parasitosis caused by , represents a natural model of chronic infection, in which some people exhibit cardiac or digestive complications that can result in death 20-40 years after the initial infection. Nonetheless, due to unknown mechanisms, some -infe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in immunology 2019-04, Vol.10, p.918-918
Hauptverfasser: Mateus, Jose, Guerrero, Paula, Lasso, Paola, Cuervo, Claudia, González, John Mario, Puerta, Concepción J, Cuéllar, Adriana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chagas disease (ChD), a complex and persistent parasitosis caused by , represents a natural model of chronic infection, in which some people exhibit cardiac or digestive complications that can result in death 20-40 years after the initial infection. Nonetheless, due to unknown mechanisms, some -infected individuals remain asymptomatic throughout their lives. Actually, no vaccine is available to prevent ChD, and treatments for chronic ChD patients are controversial. Chronically -infected individuals exhibit a deterioration of T cell function, an exhaustion state characterized by poor cytokine production and increased inhibitory receptor co-expression, suggesting that these changes are potentially related to ChD progression. Moreover, an effective anti-parasitic treatment appears to reverse this state and improve the T cell response. Taking into account these findings, the functionality state of T cells might provide a potential correlate of protection to detect individuals who will or will not develop the severe forms of ChD. Consequently, we investigated the T cell response, analyzed by flow cytometry with two multicolor immunofluorescence panels, to assess cytokines/cytotoxic molecules and the expression of inhibitory receptors, in a murine model of acute (10 and 30 days) and chronic (100 and 260 days) ChD, characterized by parasite persistence for up to 260 days post-infection and moderate inflammation of the colon and liver of -infected mice. Acute ChD induced a high antigen-specific multifunctional T cell response by producing IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-2, granzyme B, and perforin; and a high frequency of T cells co-expressed 2B4, CD160, CTLA-4, and PD-1. In contrast, chronically infected mice with moderate inflammatory infiltrate in liver tissue exhibited monofunctional antigen-specific cells, high cytotoxic activity (granzyme B and perforin), and elevated levels of inhibitory receptors (predominantly CTLA-4 and PD-1) co-expressed on T cells. Taken together, these data support our previous results showing that similar to humans, the persistence in mice promotes the dysfunctionality of T cells, and these changes might correlate with ChD progression. Thus, these results constitute a model that will facilitate an in-depth search for immune markers and correlates of protection, as well as long-term studies of new immunotherapy strategies for ChD.
ISSN:1664-3224
1664-3224
DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2019.00918