Laboratory of Thymus Research, Oswaldo Cruz Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2013 Nov 14;7(11):e2470. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002470. eCollection 2013 Nov.
We have previously shown that experimental infection caused by Trypanosoma cruzi is associated with changes in the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis. Increased glucocorticoid (GC) levels are believed to be protective against the effects of acute stress during infection but result in depletion of CD4(+)CD8(+) thymocytes by apoptosis, driving to thymic atrophy. However, very few data are available concerning prolactin (PRL), another stress-related hormone, which seems to be decreased during T. cruzi infection. Considering the immunomodulatory role of PRL upon the effects caused by GC, we investigated if intrathymic cross-talk between GC and PRL receptors (GR and PRLR, respectively) might influence T. cruzi-induced thymic atrophy. Using an acute experimental model, we observed changes in GR/PRLR cross-activation related with the survival of CD4(+)CD8(+) thymocytes during infection. These alterations were closely related with systemic changes, characterized by a stress hormone imbalance, with progressive GC augmentation simultaneously to PRL reduction. The intrathymic hormone circuitry exhibited an inverse modulation that seemed to counteract the GC-related systemic deleterious effects. During infection, adrenalectomy protected the thymus from the increase in apoptosis ratio without changing PRL levels, whereas an additional inhibition of circulating PRL accelerated the thymic atrophy and led to an increase in corticosterone systemic levels. These results demonstrate that the PRL impairment during infection is not caused by the increase of corticosterone levels, but the opposite seems to occur. Accordingly, metoclopramide (MET)-induced enhancement of PRL secretion protected thymic atrophy in acutely infected animals as well as the abnormal export of immature and potentially autoreactive CD4(+)CD8(+) thymocytes to the periphery. In conclusion, our findings clearly show that Trypanosoma cruzi subverts mouse thymus homeostasis by altering intrathymic and systemic stress-related endocrine circuitries with major consequences upon the normal process of intrathymic T cell development.
我们之前已经表明,克氏锥虫的实验感染与下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴的变化有关。人们认为,糖皮质激素(GC)水平的升高可以防止感染期间急性应激的影响,但会导致 CD4+CD8+胸腺细胞通过细胞凋亡耗竭,从而导致胸腺萎缩。然而,关于另一种应激相关激素催乳素(PRL)的相关数据非常有限,克氏锥虫感染期间似乎会降低 PRL 水平。考虑到 PRL 对 GC 引起的作用具有免疫调节作用,我们研究了 GC 和 PRL 受体(分别为 GR 和 PRLR)在胸腺内的相互作用是否会影响克氏锥虫诱导的胸腺萎缩。我们使用急性实验模型,观察到 GR/PRLR 交叉激活与感染期间 CD4+CD8+胸腺细胞存活相关的变化。这些变化与系统性变化密切相关,表现为应激激素失衡,GC 逐渐增加,同时 PRL 减少。胸腺内激素电路表现出相反的调节,似乎可以抵消与 GC 相关的系统有害影响。在感染期间,肾上腺切除术在不改变 PRL 水平的情况下保护胸腺免受凋亡比率增加的影响,而循环 PRL 的额外抑制加速了胸腺萎缩,并导致皮质酮系统水平升高。这些结果表明,感染期间 PRL 的损害不是由皮质酮水平的增加引起的,而是相反的情况。因此,甲氧氯普胺(MET)诱导的 PRL 分泌增强可保护急性感染动物的胸腺萎缩以及不成熟和潜在自身反应性 CD4+CD8+胸腺细胞向外周的异常输出。总之,我们的研究结果清楚地表明,克氏锥虫通过改变与应激相关的内源性内分泌电路来破坏小鼠胸腺的稳态,对正常的胸腺内 T 细胞发育过程产生重大影响。