Laboratory of Molecular and Biochemical Pharmacology, Biomedical Sciences Institute, Federal Universidade of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2011;6(8):e23547. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023547. Epub 2011 Aug 10.
Schistosomiasis is an intravascular parasitic disease associated with inflammation. Endothelial cells control leukocyte transmigration and vascular permeability being modulated by pro-inflammatory mediators. Recent data have shown that endothelial cells primed in vivo in the course of a disease keep the information in culture. Herein, we evaluated the impact of schistosomiasis on endothelial cell-regulated events in vivo and in vitro.
The experimental groups consisted of Schistosoma mansoni-infected and age-matched control mice. In vivo infection caused a marked influx of leukocytes and an increased protein leakage in the peritoneal cavity, characterizing an inflamed vascular and cellular profile. In vitro leukocyte-mesenteric endothelial cell adhesion was higher in cultured cells from infected mice as compared to controls, either in the basal condition or after treatment with the pro-inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Nitric oxide (NO) donation reduced leukocyte adhesion to endothelial cells from control and infected groups; however, in the later group the effect was more pronounced, probably due to a reduced NO production. Inhibition of control endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) increased leukocyte adhesion to a level similar to the one observed in the infected group. Besides, the adhesion of control leukocytes to endothelial cells from infected animals is similar to the result of infected animals, confirming that schistosomiasis alters endothelial cells function. Furthermore, NO production as well as the expression of eNOS were reduced in cultured endothelial cells from infected animals. On the other hand, the expression of its repressor protein, namely caveolin-1, was similar in both control and infected groups.
CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Schistosomiasis increases vascular permeability and endothelial cell-leukocyte interaction in vivo and in vitro. These effects are partially explained by a reduced eNOS expression. In addition, our data show that the disease primes endothelial cells in vivo, which keep the acquired phenotype in culture.
血吸虫病是一种与炎症相关的血管内寄生虫病。内皮细胞控制白细胞迁移和血管通透性,受促炎介质调节。最近的数据表明,在疾病过程中体内被预先激活的内皮细胞在培养中保留了信息。在此,我们评估了血吸虫病对体内和体外内皮细胞调节事件的影响。
实验组由感染曼氏血吸虫和年龄匹配的对照小鼠组成。体内感染导致白细胞明显涌入和腹腔内蛋白渗漏增加,表现出炎症性血管和细胞特征。与对照组相比,感染小鼠培养的内皮细胞在基础状态或经促炎细胞因子肿瘤坏死因子(TNF)处理后,白细胞-肠系膜内皮细胞黏附增加。一氧化氮(NO)供体减少了对照组和感染组内皮细胞的白细胞黏附;然而,在后一组中,效果更为明显,可能是由于 NO 产生减少。抑制对照内皮型一氧化氮合酶(eNOS)增加了白细胞对内皮细胞的黏附,达到与感染组观察到的相似水平。此外,对照组白细胞与感染动物内皮细胞的黏附类似于感染动物的结果,证实了血吸虫病改变了内皮细胞的功能。此外,感染动物培养的内皮细胞中 NO 产生和 eNOS 的表达减少,而 caveolin-1 的表达在对照组和感染组中相似。
结论/意义:血吸虫病增加了体内和体外的血管通透性和内皮细胞-白细胞相互作用。这些效应部分是由于 eNOS 表达减少所致。此外,我们的数据表明,该疾病在体内使内皮细胞预先激活,在培养中保留获得的表型。