Hammoudi Pierre-Mehdi, Soldati-Favre Dominique
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Medicine, CMU, University of Geneva, 1 Rue Michel-Servet, 1206 Geneva, Switzerland.
Emerg Top Life Sci. 2017 Dec 22;1(6):563-572. doi: 10.1042/ETLS20170108.
Typically illustrating the 'manipulation hypothesis', Toxoplasma gondii is widely known to trigger sustainable behavioural changes during chronic infection of intermediate hosts to enhance transmission to its feline definitive hosts, ensuring survival and dissemination. During the chronic stage of infection in rodents, a variety of neurological dysfunctions have been unravelled and correlated with the loss of cat fear, among other phenotypic impacts. However, the underlying neurological alteration(s) driving these behavioural modifications is only partially understood, which makes it difficult to draw more than a correlation between T. gondii infection and changes in brain homeostasis. Moreover, it is barely known which among the brain regions governing fear and stress responses are preferentially affected during T. gondii infection. Studies aiming at an in-depth dissection of underlying molecular mechanisms occurring at the host and parasite levels will be discussed in this review. Addressing this reminiscent topic in the light of recent technical progress and new discoveries regarding fear response, olfaction and neuromodulator mechanisms could contribute to a better understanding of this complex host-parasite interaction.
通常来说,弓形虫能够说明“操纵假说”,众所周知,在中间宿主的慢性感染期间,它会引发可持续的行为变化,以增强向其猫科终末宿主的传播,从而确保生存和传播。在啮齿动物感染的慢性阶段,已经发现了多种神经功能障碍,并将其与对猫的恐惧丧失以及其他表型影响联系起来。然而,驱动这些行为改变的潜在神经改变仅得到部分理解,这使得难以得出弓形虫感染与脑内稳态变化之间的关联,而不仅仅是相关性。此外,几乎不清楚在弓形虫感染期间,哪些控制恐惧和应激反应的脑区会受到优先影响。本综述将讨论旨在深入剖析宿主和寄生虫水平上潜在分子机制的研究。鉴于最近在恐惧反应、嗅觉和神经调节机制方面的技术进展和新发现,探讨这个令人回味的话题可能有助于更好地理解这种复杂的宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用。