Robinson Prema, Martin Protacio, Garza Armandina, D'Souza Melinda, Mastrangelo Mary-Ann, Tweardy David
Department of Medicine, Section of Infectious Disease, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
J Parasitol. 2008 Oct;94(5):1150-4. doi: 10.1645/GE-1458.1.
Cryptosporidiosis, caused by the protozoan parasite Cryptosporidium parvum, causes self-limited diarrhea in normal hosts but can cause life-threatening diarrhea for immunosuppressed patients. There is an urgent need for new drugs to treat this chronic disease. Cryptosporidium parvum infection is associated with intestinal structural and pathophysiologic changes, including villi blunting and glucose malabsorption. Substance P (SP), a neuropeptide and pain transmitter, is associated with the gastrointestinal tract and is elevated in humans and macaques after experimental C. parvum challenge. To examine the relevance of SP in the pathogenesis of cryptosporidiosis, and to determine if SP receptor antagonism can be employed for treatment of cryptosporidiosis in immunosuppressed hosts, we used an immunosuppressed murine model (dexamethasone-immunosuppressed mice) that is frequently utilized for examining chemotherapeutic potential of drugs. Quantitative ELISA was used to measure intestinal SP levels in immunosuppressed mice with, and without, C. parvum infection. Intestinal physiological alterations, as studied by the Ussing chamber technique, plus weight change, fecal oocyst shedding, and villi measurements, were compared in infected mice with, and without, SP receptor antagonist (aprepitant) treatment. Immunosuppressed mice infected with C. parvum demonstrated increased SP levels as well as physiological alterations (glucose malabsorption), weight loss, fecal oocyst shedding, and structural alterations (increased intestinal villi blunting) compared to uninfected mice. Each of these defects was significantly inhibited by aprepitant treatment. These studies demonstrate the potential of SP receptor antagonism for treatment of pathogenesis of cryptosporidiosis in immunosuppressed hosts.
隐孢子虫病由原生动物寄生虫微小隐孢子虫引起,在正常宿主中会导致自限性腹泻,但对免疫抑制患者可能会引发危及生命的腹泻。迫切需要新的药物来治疗这种慢性疾病。微小隐孢子虫感染与肠道结构和病理生理变化有关,包括绒毛变钝和葡萄糖吸收不良。P物质(SP)是一种神经肽和疼痛递质,与胃肠道有关,在实验性微小隐孢子虫攻击后,人类和猕猴体内的P物质水平会升高。为了研究SP在隐孢子虫病发病机制中的相关性,并确定SP受体拮抗作用是否可用于治疗免疫抑制宿主的隐孢子虫病,我们使用了一种常用于研究药物化疗潜力的免疫抑制小鼠模型(地塞米松免疫抑制小鼠)。采用定量ELISA法测定感染和未感染微小隐孢子虫的免疫抑制小鼠肠道中的SP水平。通过尤斯灌流室技术研究肠道生理改变,同时比较感染小鼠在接受和未接受SP受体拮抗剂(阿瑞匹坦)治疗时的体重变化、粪便卵囊排出量和绒毛测量结果。与未感染小鼠相比,感染微小隐孢子虫的免疫抑制小鼠表现出SP水平升高以及生理改变(葡萄糖吸收不良)、体重减轻、粪便卵囊排出和结构改变(肠道绒毛变钝增加)。阿瑞匹坦治疗可显著抑制所有这些缺陷。这些研究证明了SP受体拮抗作用在治疗免疫抑制宿主隐孢子虫病发病机制方面的潜力。