Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G61 1QH, UK.
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G61 1QH, UK.
Methods. 2017 Aug 15;127:79-87. doi: 10.1016/j.ymeth.2017.06.015. Epub 2017 Jun 19.
Although Trypanosoma brucei spp. was first detected by Aldo Castellani in CSF samples taken from sleeping sickness patients over a century ago there is still a great deal of debate surrounding the timing, route and effects of transmigration of the parasite from the blood to the CNS. In this investigation, we have applied contrast-enhance magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to study the effects of trypanosome infection on the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in the well-established GVR35 mouse model of sleeping sickness. In addition, we have measured the trypanosome load present in the brain using quantitative Taqman PCR and assessed the severity of the neuroinflammatory reaction at specific time points over the course of the infection. Contrast enhanced-MRI detected a significant degree of BBB impairment in mice at 14days following trypanosome infection, which increased in a step-wise fashion as the disease progressed. Parasite DNA was present in the brain tissue on day 7 after infection. This increased significantly in quantity by day 14 post-infection and continued to rise as the infection advanced. A progressive increase in neuroinflammation was detected following trypanosome infection, reaching a significant level of severity on day 14 post-infection and rising further at later time-points. In this model stage-2 disease presents at 21days post-infection. The combination of the three methodologies indicates that changes in the CNS become apparent prior to the onset of established stage-2 disease. This could in part account for the difficulties associated with defining specific criteria to distinguish stage-1 and stage-2 infections and highlights the need for improved staging diagnostics.
虽然在上个世纪初,Aldo Castellani 就已经在来自昏睡病患者的脑脊液样本中首次检测到布氏锥虫(Trypanosoma brucei spp.),但关于寄生虫从血液向中枢神经系统(CNS)迁移的时间、途径和影响,仍存在大量争议。在本研究中,我们应用对比增强磁共振成像(MRI)来研究在已建立的昏睡病 GVR35 小鼠模型中,寄生虫感染对血脑屏障(BBB)的影响。此外,我们使用定量 Taqman PCR 测量了脑中的寄生虫载量,并在感染过程中的特定时间点评估了神经炎症反应的严重程度。对比增强 MRI 在感染后 14 天检测到小鼠 BBB 严重损伤,随着疾病进展,这种损伤呈逐步增加的趋势。感染后第 7 天,脑组织中就有寄生虫 DNA 存在。在感染后第 14 天,其数量显著增加,并随着感染的进展而继续上升。在感染锥虫后,神经炎症逐渐加剧,在感染后第 14 天达到严重程度,并在后期进一步上升。在该模型中,21 天后出现 2 期疾病。三种方法的结合表明,中枢神经系统的变化在确立的 2 期疾病发生之前就已经明显。这在一定程度上解释了定义区分 1 期和 2 期感染的具体标准所面临的困难,并强调了对改进分期诊断的需求。