Roslin Institute, Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Wellcome Centre for Integrative Parasitology, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Front Immunol. 2020 Jun 12;11:1250. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01250. eCollection 2020.
African trypanosomes are single-celled extracellular protozoan parasites transmitted by tsetse fly vectors across sub-Saharan Africa, causing serious disease in both humans and animals. Mammalian infections begin when the tsetse fly penetrates the skin in order to take a blood meal, depositing trypanosomes into the dermal layer. Similarly, onward transmission occurs when differentiated and insect pre-adapted forms are ingested by the fly during a blood meal. Between these transmission steps, trypanosomes access the systemic circulation of the vertebrate host the skin-draining lymph nodes, disseminating into multiple tissues and organs, and establishing chronic, and long-lasting infections. However, most studies of the immunobiology of African trypanosomes have been conducted under experimental conditions that bypass the skin as a route for systemic dissemination (typically intraperitoneal or intravenous routes). Therefore, the importance of these initial interactions between trypanosomes and the skin at the site of initial infection, and the implications for these processes in infection establishment, have largely been overlooked. Recent studies have also demonstrated active and complex interactions between the mammalian host and trypanosomes in the skin during initial infection and revealed the skin as an overlooked anatomical reservoir for transmission. This highlights the importance of this organ when investigating the biology of trypanosome infections and the associated immune responses at the initial site of infection. Here, we review the mechanisms involved in establishing African trypanosome infections and potential of the skin as a reservoir, the role of innate immune cells in the skin during initial infection, and the subsequent immune interactions as the parasites migrate from the skin. We suggest that a thorough identification of the mechanisms involved in establishing African trypanosome infections in the skin and their progression through the host is essential for the development of novel approaches to interrupt disease transmission and control these important diseases.
非洲锥虫是一种单细胞的细胞外原生动物寄生虫,通过采采蝇传播在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,对人类和动物都造成严重的疾病。哺乳动物感染始于采采蝇穿透皮肤以获取血液时,将锥虫沉积在真皮层中。同样,当分化和昆虫预适应的形式在采采蝇吸血时被摄入时,也会发生传播。在这些传播步骤之间,锥虫进入脊椎动物宿主的全身循环——皮肤引流的淋巴结,扩散到多个组织和器官,并建立慢性和持久的感染。然而,大多数非洲锥虫免疫生物学的研究都是在绕过皮肤作为全身传播途径的实验条件下进行的(通常是腹腔内或静脉内途径)。因此,这些最初的锥虫与皮肤之间的相互作用以及这些过程对感染建立的影响,在很大程度上被忽视了。最近的研究还表明,在初始感染期间,哺乳动物宿主和锥虫之间在皮肤中存在积极和复杂的相互作用,并揭示了皮肤作为一个被忽视的传播解剖储库。这突出了该器官在研究锥虫感染的生物学和初始感染部位的相关免疫反应时的重要性。在这里,我们综述了建立非洲锥虫感染的机制以及皮肤作为储库的潜力、固有免疫细胞在初始感染期间在皮肤中的作用,以及寄生虫从皮肤迁移时随后的免疫相互作用。我们认为,彻底确定在皮肤中建立非洲锥虫感染及其在宿主中传播的机制对于开发新方法来中断疾病传播和控制这些重要疾病是至关重要的。