Trypanosoma cruzi high infectivity in vitro is related to cardiac lesions during long-term infection in Beagle dogs
Trypanosoma cruzi is a hemoflagelate parasite associated with heart dysfunctions causing serious problems in Central and South America. Beagle dogs develop the symptoms of Chagas disease in humans, and could be an important experimental model for better understanding the immunopathogenic mechanisms...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 2007-05, Vol.102 (2), p.149-147 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Trypanosoma cruzi is a hemoflagelate parasite associated with heart
dysfunctions causing serious problems in Central and South America.
Beagle dogs develop the symptoms of Chagas disease in humans, and could
be an important experimental model for better understanding the
immunopathogenic mechanisms involved in the chagasic infection. In the
present study we investigated the relation among biological factors
inherent to the parasite (trypomastigote polymorphism and in vitro
infectivity) and immunoglobulin production, inflammation, and fibrosis
in the heart of Beagle dogs infected with either T. cruzi Y or
Berenice-78 strains. In vitro infectivity of Vero cells as well as the
extension of cardiac lesions in infected Beagle was higher for Y strain
when compared to Berenice-78 strain. These data suggested that in vitro
infectivity assays may correlate with pathogenicity in vivo. In fact,
animals infected with Y strain, which shows prevalence of slender forms
and high infectivity in vitro, presented cardiomegaly, inflammation,
and fibrosis in heart area. Concerning the immunoglobulin production,
no statistically significant difference was observed for IgA, IgM or
IgG levels among T. cruzi infected animals. However, IgA together IgM
levels have shown to be a good marker for the acute phase of Chagas
disease. |
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ISSN: | 1678-8060 0074-0276 |