Doyle Patricia S, Zhou Yuan M, Engel Juan C, McKerrow James H
Department of Pathology, University of California San Francisco, CA 94121, USA.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2007 Nov;51(11):3932-9. doi: 10.1128/AAC.00436-07. Epub 2007 Aug 13.
Chagas' disease, caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, remains the leading cause of cardiopathy in Latin America with about 12 million people infected. Classic clinical manifestations derive from infection of muscle cells leading to progressive cardiomyopathy, while some patients develop megacolon or megaesophagus. A very aggressive clinical course including fulminant meningoencephalitis has been reported in patients who contract Chagas' disease in the background of immunodeficiency. This includes patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection as well as patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy for organ transplant. Currently, only two drugs are approved for the treatment of Chagas' disease, nifurtimox and benznidazole. Both have significant limitations due to common and serious side effects as well as limited availability. A promising group of new drug leads for Chagas' disease is cysteine protease inhibitors targeting cruzain, the major protease of T. cruzi. The inhibitor N-methyl-Pip-F-homoF-vinyl sulfonyl phenyl (N-methyl-Pip-F-hF-VS phi) is in late-stage preclinical development. Therefore, the question arose as to whether protease inhibitors targeting cruzain would have efficacy in Chagas' disease occurring in the background of immunodeficiency. To address this question, we studied the course of infection in recombinase-deficient (Rag1(-/-)) and normal mice infected with T. cruzi. Infections localized to heart and skeletal muscle in untreated normal animals, while untreated Rag1(-/-) mice showed severe infection in all organs and predominantly in liver and spleen. Treatment with the dipeptide N-methyl-Pip-F-hF-VS phi rescued immunodeficient animals from lethal Chagas' infection. The majority (60 to 100%) of inhibitor-treated Rag1(-/-) mice had increased survival, negative PCR, and normal tissues by histopathological examination.
恰加斯病由克氏锥虫寄生虫引起,仍是拉丁美洲心脏病的主要病因,约有1200万人感染。典型的临床表现源于肌肉细胞感染,导致进行性心肌病,而一些患者会出现巨结肠或巨食管。据报道,在免疫缺陷背景下感染恰加斯病的患者会出现非常严重的临床病程,包括暴发性脑膜脑炎。这包括人类免疫缺陷病毒感染患者以及接受器官移植免疫抑制治疗的患者。目前,仅两种药物被批准用于治疗恰加斯病,即硝呋莫司和苯硝唑。由于常见且严重的副作用以及供应有限,这两种药物都有很大局限性。一组有前景的治疗恰加斯病的新药先导物是靶向克鲁兹蛋白酶(克氏锥虫的主要蛋白酶)的半胱氨酸蛋白酶抑制剂。抑制剂N-甲基-哌啶-F-高氟-乙烯磺酰苯基(N-methyl-Pip-F-hF-VS phi)正处于临床前后期开发阶段。因此,出现了一个问题,即靶向克鲁兹蛋白酶的蛋白酶抑制剂在免疫缺陷背景下发生的恰加斯病中是否有效。为了解决这个问题,我们研究了重组酶缺陷(Rag1(-/-))小鼠和正常小鼠感染克氏锥虫后的感染过程。在未治疗的正常动物中,感染局限于心脏和骨骼肌,而未治疗的Rag1(-/-)小鼠在所有器官中都表现出严重感染,主要是肝脏和脾脏。用二肽N-甲基-哌啶-F-hF-VS phi治疗可使免疫缺陷动物免于致命的恰加斯病感染。大多数(60%至100%)接受抑制剂治疗的Rag1(-/-)小鼠存活期延长,PCR检测呈阴性,组织病理学检查显示组织正常。