Live imaging of collagen deposition during experimental hepatic schistosomiasis and recovery: a view on a dynamic process

Hepatic fibrosis is the central cause of chronic clinical pathology resulting from infection by the blood flukes Schistosoma japonicum or S. mansoni. Much has been elucidated regarding the molecular, cellular and immunological responses that correspond to the formation of the granulomatous response...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Laboratory investigation 2019-02, Vol.99 (2), p.231-243
Hauptverfasser: Harvie, Marina C.G., McManus, Donald P., You, Hong, Rivera, Vanessa A., Nawaratna, Sujeevi K., MacDonald, Kelli P.A., Ramm, Grant A., Gobert, Geoffrey N.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Hepatic fibrosis is the central cause of chronic clinical pathology resulting from infection by the blood flukes Schistosoma japonicum or S. mansoni. Much has been elucidated regarding the molecular, cellular and immunological responses that correspond to the formation of the granulomatous response to trapped schistosome eggs. A central feature of this Th2 response is the deposition of collagen around the periphery of the granuloma. To date, traditional histology and transcriptional methods have been used to quantify the deposition of collagen and to monitor the formation of the hepatic granuloma during experimental animal models of schistosomiasis. We have investigated the dynamic nature of granuloma formation through the use of a transgenic mouse model (B6.Collagen 1(A) luciferase mice (B6.Coll 1A-luc+)). With this model and whole-animal bioluminescence imaging, we followed the deposition of collagen during an active schistosome infection with Chinese and Philippines geographical strains of S. japonicum and after clearance of the adult parasites by the drug praziquantel. Individual mice were re-imaged over the time course to provide robust real-time quantitation of the development of chronic fibrotic disease. This model provides an improved method to follow the course of hepatic schistosomiasis-induced hepatic pathology and effectively supports the current dogma of the formation of hepatic fibrosis, originally elucidated from static traditional histology. This study demonstrates the first use of the B6.Coll 1A-luc+ mouse to monitor the dynamics of disease development and the treatment of pathogen-induced infection with the underlying pathology of fibrosis. Schistosome flukes induce pathology due to trapped parasite eggs, producing a granulomatous-immune response delineated by fibrosis and the deposition of collagen in the liver. The authors present whole animal imaging for the quantitation of hepatic collagen deposition during the early stages of pathology.
ISSN:0023-6837
1530-0307
DOI:10.1038/s41374-018-0154-0