AI Article Synopsis

  • TCTs from Chagas disease can trigger inflammation and microvascular leakage through the activation of innate immune cells via TLR2 and subsequent immune pathways.
  • The study reveals that mast cells (MCs) play a crucial role in this inflammatory response, particularly through the activation of the kallikrein-kinin system (KKS), leading to increased bradykinin levels.
  • In experiments with mice, it was found that MCs are essential for controlling the parasite load in the heart, suggesting that MC interactions with the KKS are vital for regulating inflammation during Chagas disease.

Article Abstract

During the course of Chagas disease, infectious forms of are occasionally liberated from parasitized heart cells. Studies performed with tissue culture trypomastigotes (TCTs, Dm28c strain) demonstrated that these parasites evoke neutrophil/CXCR2-dependent microvascular leakage by activating innate sentinel cells toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2). Upon plasma extravasation, proteolytically derived kinins and C5a stimulate immunoprotective Th1 responses cross-talk between bradykinin B2 receptors (B2Rs) and C5aR. Awareness that TCTs invade cardiovascular cells interdependent activation of B2R and endothelin receptors [endothelin A receptor (ETR)/endothelin B receptor (ETR)] led us to hypothesize that might reciprocally benefit from the formation of infection-associated edema activation of kallikrein-kinin system (KKS). Using intravital microscopy, here we first examined the functional interplay between mast cells (MCs) and the KKS by topically exposing the hamster cheek pouch (HCP) tissues to dextran sulfate (DXS), a potent "contact" activator of the KKS. Surprisingly, although DXS was inert for at least 30 min, a subtle MC-driven leakage resulted in factor XII (FXII)-dependent activation of the KKS, which then amplified inflammation generation of bradykinin (BK). Guided by this mechanistic insight, we next exposed TCTs to "leaky" HCP-forged by low dose histamine application-and found that the proinflammatory phenotype of TCTs was boosted by BK generated the MC/KKS pathway. Measurements of footpad edema in MC-deficient mice linked TCT-evoked inflammation to MC degranulation (upstream) and FXII-mediated generation of BK (downstream). We then inoculated TCTs intracardiacally in mice and found a striking decrease of parasite DNA (quantitative polymerase chain reaction; 3 d.p.i.) in the heart of MC-deficient mutant mice. Moreover, the intracardiac parasite load was significantly reduced in WT mice pretreated with (i) cromoglycate (MC stabilizer) (ii) infestin-4, a specific inhibitor of FXIIa (iii) HOE-140 (specific antagonist of B2R), and (iv) bosentan, a non-selective antagonist of ETR/ETR. Notably, histopathology of heart tissues from mice pretreated with these G protein-coupled receptors blockers revealed that myocarditis and heart fibrosis (30 d.p.i.) was markedly and redundantly attenuated. Collectively, our study suggests that inflammatory edema propagated activation of the MC/KKS pathway fuels intracardiac parasitism by generating infection-stimulatory peptides (BK and endothelins) in the edematous heart tissues.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5539176PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.00840DOI Listing

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