Área Inmunología, Departamento de Biociencias (DEPBIO), Facultad de Química, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay; Unidad Asociada de Inmunología, Instituto de Química Biológica (IQB), Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay; Laboratorio de Inmunología, Instituto de Higiene "Prof. Arnoldo Berta", Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay; Graduate Program in Biotechnology, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay.
Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Institute of Research on Microbiology and Medical Parasitology (IMPaM, UBA-CONICET), University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Methods Cell Biol. 2024;185:115-136. doi: 10.1016/bs.mcb.2024.02.039. Epub 2024 Mar 12.
Cystic echinococcosis (CE) is a parasitic zoonosis caused by the larval stage of the cestode Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato (s. l.), a genetic complex composed of five species: E. granulosus sensu stricto (s. s.), E. equinus, E. ortleppi, E. canadensis, and E. felidis. The parasite requires two mammalian hosts to complete its life cycle: a definitive host (mainly dogs) harboring the adult parasite in its intestines, and an intermediate host (mostly farm and wild ungulates) where hydatid cysts develop mainly in the liver and lungs. Humans are accidental intermediate hosts, being susceptible to either primary or secondary forms of CE; the first one due to the ingestion of oncospheres, and the second one because of the spillage of protoscoleces (PSC) contained within a primary cyst. Secondary CE is a serious medical problem, and can be modeled in immunocompetent mice (a non-natural intermediate host) through the intraperitoneal inoculation of viable PSC from E. granulosus s. l. This model is useful to study not only the immunobiology of CE, but also to test new chemotherapeutics or therapeutical protocols, to explore novel vaccine candidates, and to evaluate alternative diagnostic and/or follow-up tools. The mouse model of secondary CE involves two sequential stages: an early stage of parasite pre-encystment (PSC develop into hydatid cysts in the peritoneal cavity of mice), and a late or chronic stage of parasite post-encystment (already differentiated cysts slowly grow during the whole host lifespan). This model is a time-consuming infection, whose outcome depends on several factors like the parasite infective dose, the mouse strain, and the parasite species/genotype. Thus, such variables should always be adjusted according to the research objectives. Herein, the general materials and procedures needed to establish secondary CE in mice are described, as well as several useful tips and recommendations.
囊性包虫病(CE)是一种寄生虫性人畜共患病,由绦虫幼虫期的细粒棘球绦虫(s.l.)引起,这是一个由 5 个物种组成的遗传复合物:细粒棘球绦虫(s.s.)、马绦虫、多房棘球绦虫、加拿大棘球绦虫和犬绦虫。该寄生虫需要两个哺乳动物宿主来完成其生命周期:一个是终末宿主(主要是狗),其肠道中寄生有成年寄生虫,另一个是中间宿主(主要是农场和野生有蹄类动物),在那里,包囊主要在肝脏和肺部发育。人类是偶然的中间宿主,容易感染原发性或继发性 CE;前者是由于摄入原头蚴,后者是由于原发性包囊中溢出的原头节(PSC)。继发性 CE 是一个严重的医学问题,可以通过向免疫功能正常的小鼠(非自然中间宿主)腹腔内接种有活力的 s.l.细粒棘球绦虫原头节来模拟。该模型不仅可用于研究 CE 的免疫生物学,还可用于测试新的化疗药物或治疗方案,探索新的疫苗候选物,并评估替代的诊断和/或随访工具。继发性 CE 的小鼠模型涉及两个连续阶段:寄生虫前包囊阶段(PSC 在小鼠的腹腔内发育成包囊)和寄生虫后包囊阶段(已分化的包囊在宿主整个生命周期中缓慢生长)。该模型是一种耗时的感染,其结果取决于寄生虫感染剂量、小鼠品系和寄生虫物种/基因型等几个因素。因此,这些变量应根据研究目标进行调整。本文描述了在小鼠中建立继发性 CE 的一般材料和程序,以及一些有用的提示和建议。