Department of Pathology and Sackler School of Graduate Students, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Adv Parasitol. 2011;76:195-233. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-385895-5.00009-8.
Autonomic dysfunction plays a significant role in the development of chronic Chagas disease (CD). Destruction of cardiac parasympathetic ganglia can underlie arrhythmia and heart failure, while lesions of enteric neurons in the intestinal plexuses are a direct cause of aperistalsis and megasyndromes. Neuropathology is generated by acute infection when the parasite, though not directly damaging to neuronal cells, elicits immune reactions that can become cytotoxic, inducing oxidative stress and neurodegeneration. Anti-neuronal autoimmunity may further contribute to neuropathology. Much less clear is the mechanism of subsequent neuronal regeneration in patients that survive acute infection. Morphological and functional recovery of the peripheral neurons in these patients correlates with the absence of CD clinical symptoms, while persistent neuronal deficiency is observed for the symptomatic group. The discovery that Trypanosoma cruzi trans-sialidase can moonlight as a parasite-derived neurotrophic factor (PDNF) suggests that the parasite might influence the balance between neuronal degeneration and regeneration. PDNF functionally mimics mammalian neurotrophic factors in that it binds and activates neurotrophin Trk tyrosine kinase receptors, a mechanism which prevents neurodegeneration. PDNF binding to Trk receptors triggers PI3K/Akt/GSK-3β and MAPK/Erk/CREB signalling cascades which in neurons translates into resistance to oxidative and nutritional stress, and inhibition of apoptosis, whereas in the cytoplasm of infected cells, PDNF represents a substrate-activator of the host Akt kinase, enhancing host-cell survival until completion of the intracellular cycle of the parasite. Such dual activity of PDNF provides sustained activation of survival mechanisms which, while prolonging parasite persistence in host tissues, can underlie distinct outcomes of CD.
自主神经功能障碍在慢性恰加斯病(CD)的发展中起着重要作用。心脏副交感神经节的破坏可能导致心律失常和心力衰竭,而肠道神经丛中的肠神经元病变是蠕动不良和巨结肠综合征的直接原因。寄生虫引起的急性感染会产生神经病理学,尽管寄生虫不会直接损害神经元细胞,但它会引发免疫反应,从而产生细胞毒性,引发氧化应激和神经退行性变。抗神经元自身免疫可能进一步导致神经病理学。不太清楚的是在急性感染后幸存的患者中随后神经元再生的机制。这些患者外周神经元的形态和功能恢复与 CD 临床症状的缺失相关,而在有症状的患者中则观察到持续的神经元缺乏。发现克氏锥虫转涎酸酶可以兼职作为寄生虫衍生的神经营养因子(PDNF),这表明寄生虫可能影响神经元退化和再生之间的平衡。PDNF 通过与神经营养因子受体 Trk 结合并激活其酪氨酸激酶,模拟哺乳动物神经营养因子的功能,从而防止神经退行性变。PDNF 与 Trk 受体结合触发 PI3K/Akt/GSK-3β 和 MAPK/Erk/CREB 信号级联反应,在神经元中转化为抵抗氧化和营养应激以及抑制细胞凋亡,而在感染细胞的细胞质中,PDNF 代表宿主 Akt 激酶的底物激活剂,增强宿主细胞的存活,直到寄生虫的细胞内周期完成。PDNF 的这种双重活性提供了持续的生存机制激活,虽然延长了寄生虫在宿主组织中的持续存在,但可能是 CD 不同结果的基础。