Fond G, Capdevielle D, Macgregor A, Attal J, Larue A, Brittner M, Ducasse D, Boulenger J-P
Université Montpellier 1, 34006 Montpellier, France.
Encephale. 2013 Feb;39(1):38-43. doi: 10.1016/j.encep.2012.06.014. Epub 2012 Aug 21.
Toxoplasma gondii is the most common protozoan parasite in developed nations. Up to 43% of the French population may be infected, depending on eating habits and exposure to cats, and almost one third of the world human's population may be infected. Two types of infection have been described: a congenital form and an acquired form. Although the medical profession treats these latent cases as asymptomatic and clinically unimportant, results of animal studies and recent studies of personality profiles, behavior, and psychomotor performance have led to reconsider this assumption.
Among rats: parasite cysts are more abundant in amygdalar structures than those found in other regions of the brain. Infection does not influence locomotion, anxiety, hippocampal-dependent learning, fear conditioning (or its extinction) and neophobia in rats. Rats' natural predator is the cat, which is also T. gondii's reservoir. Naturally, rats have an aversion to cat urine, but the parasite suppresses this aversion in rats, thus influencing the infection cycle. Tachyzoites may invade different types of nervous cells, such as neurons, astrocytes and microglial cells in the brain, and Purkinje cells in cerebellum. Intracellular tachyzoites manipulate several signs for transduction mechanisms involved in apoptosis, antimicrobial effectors functions, and immune cell maturation. Dopamine levels are 14% higher in mice with chronic infections. These neurochemical changes may be factors contributing to mental and motor abnormalities that accompany or follow toxoplasmosis in rodents and possibly in humans. Moreover, the antipsychotic haloperidol and the mood stabilizer valproic acid most effectively inhibit Toxoplasma growth in vitro with synergistic activity.
The effects of the parasite are not due to the manipulation in an evolutionary sense but merely due to neuropathological or neuroimmunological effects of the parasite's presence. Toxoplasmosis and schizophrenia: epidemiological studies point to a role for toxoplasmosis in schizophrenia's etiology, probably during pregnancy and early life, this association being congruent with studies in animal models indicating that animal exposures of the developing brain to infectious agents or immune modulating agents can be associated with behavioral changes that do not appear until the animal reaches full maturity. Psychiatric patients have increased rates of toxoplasmic antibodies, the differences between cases and controls being greatest in individuals who are assayed near the time of the onset of their symptoms. The increase of dopamine in the brain of infected subjects can represent the missing link between toxoplasmosis and schizophrenia. Toxoplasmosis and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD): the seropositivity rate for anti-T. gondii IgG antibodies among OCD patients is found to be significantly higher than the rate in healthy volunteers. Infection of basal ganglia may be implicated in the pathogenesis of OCD among Toxoplasma seropositive subjects. Toxoplasmosis and personality: infected men appear to be more dogmatic, less confident, more jealous, more cautious, less impulsive and more orderly than others. Conversely, infected women seem warmest, more conscientious, more insecure, more sanctimonious and more persistent than others. It is possible that differences in the level of testosterone may be responsible for the observed behavioral differences between Toxoplasma-infected and Toxoplasma-free subjects.
In the future two major avenues for research seem essential. On one hand, prospective studies and research efforts must still be carried out to understand the mechanisms by which the parasite induces these psychiatric disorders. On the other hand, it has not yet been demonstrated that patients with positive toxoplasmic serology may better respond to haloperidol's or valproic acid's antiparasitic activity. These results may appear as a major issue in the drug's prescribing choices and explain variability in response to the treatment of patients with schizophrenia that is not explained by the genetic polymorphism.
弓形虫是发达国家最常见的原生动物寄生虫。根据饮食习惯和与猫的接触情况,法国高达43%的人口可能受到感染,全球近三分之一的人口可能被感染。已描述了两种感染类型:先天性感染和后天性感染。尽管医学界将这些潜伏病例视为无症状且临床上不重要,但动物研究以及最近关于人格特征、行为和精神运动表现的研究结果促使人们重新审视这一假设。
在大鼠中:杏仁核结构中的寄生虫囊肿比大脑其他区域的更丰富。感染不影响大鼠的运动、焦虑、海马依赖性学习、恐惧条件反射(或其消退)和新物恐惧症。大鼠的天然捕食者是猫,而猫也是弓形虫的宿主。自然情况下,大鼠厌恶猫尿,但寄生虫会抑制大鼠的这种厌恶感,从而影响感染循环。速殖子可侵入不同类型的神经细胞,如大脑中的神经元、星形胶质细胞和小胶质细胞,以及小脑中的浦肯野细胞。细胞内速殖子操纵参与细胞凋亡、抗菌效应器功能和免疫细胞成熟的多种信号转导机制。慢性感染小鼠的多巴胺水平高出14%。这些神经化学变化可能是导致啮齿动物以及可能人类弓形虫病伴随或后续出现的精神和运动异常的因素。此外,抗精神病药物氟哌啶醇和情绪稳定剂丙戊酸在体外最有效地抑制弓形虫生长,具有协同活性。
寄生虫的影响并非出于进化意义上的操纵,而仅仅是由于其存在所产生的神经病理学或神经免疫学影响。弓形虫病与精神分裂症:流行病学研究表明弓形虫病在精神分裂症病因中起作用,可能在孕期和生命早期,这种关联与动物模型研究一致,表明发育中的大脑接触感染因子或免疫调节剂可导致行为变化,这些变化在动物完全成熟后才会出现。精神科患者弓形虫抗体率升高,病例与对照之间的差异在症状发作时接受检测的个体中最为显著。受感染个体大脑中多巴胺的增加可能代表弓形虫病与精神分裂症之间缺失的环节。弓形虫病与强迫症(OCD):强迫症患者中抗弓形虫IgG抗体的血清阳性率显著高于健康志愿者。基底神经节感染可能与弓形虫血清阳性个体的强迫症发病机制有关。弓形虫病与人格:受感染男性似乎比其他人更教条、更不自信、更嫉妒、更谨慎、更不冲动且更有条理。相反,受感染女性似乎比其他人更热情、更尽责、更缺乏安全感、更伪善且更执着。睾酮水平的差异可能是弓形虫感染和未感染个体之间观察到的行为差异的原因。
未来两个主要的研究途径似乎至关重要。一方面,仍必须进行前瞻性研究和研究工作,以了解寄生虫诱发这些精神障碍的机制。另一方面,尚未证明弓形虫血清学阳性的患者可能对氟哌啶醇或丙戊酸的抗寄生虫活性反应更好。这些结果可能成为药物处方选择中的一个主要问题,并解释了精神分裂症患者对治疗反应的变异性,而这种变异性无法用基因多态性来解释。