Zhang L, Tarleton R L
Department of Cellular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens 30602, USA.
Exp Parasitol. 1996 Nov;84(2):203-13. doi: 10.1006/expr.1996.0106.
Trypanosoma cruzi infection in humans and experimental animals often results in a chronic heart and gut inflammation and a dysfunction known as Chagas' disease. Previous studies have shown that the cellular infiltrate in the hearts of animals with chronic Chagas' disease consists mainly of CD8+ T cells. In this study, we have used immunohistochemical techniques to further characterize the immunological nature of chagasic heart lesions in three murine models of experimental Chagas' disease. Double-staining immunohistochemistry revealed that 10-30% of the infiltrating CD8+ T cells in the hearts of infected mice expressed the activation molecules, IL-2 receptor and CD44. In addition, large numbers of cells producing TNF-alpha, TGF-beta, IL-1 alpha, and IL-6 were consistently observed in the heart lesions, appearing during the acute infection and persisting throughout the chronic stage of infection (> 300 days). In contrast, IFN-gamma- and IL-10-producing cells were detected in relatively low numbers and only transiently between approximately 3 and 9 weeks postinfection. Cells producing IL-2, IL-4, and IL-5 were not observed in the hearts of mice at any point during the infection. The appearance of cytokine-producing cells in the hearts correlated with an increased local expression of class I and class II MHC molecules and adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, LFA-1, VLA-4, and VCAM-1). The results of this study suggest that the chronic inflammation in chagasic hearts is highly active and associated with a stable immunological pattern extending from the early acute stage of the infection through the late chronic stage. The pattern of cytokine production in heart is distinct from that observed in lymphoid organs and is not suggestive of an association between particular classes of cytokines and disease development. Instead it appears that both inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines determine the pattern of the cellular response and the severity of disease in T. cruzi infection.
人类和实验动物感染克氏锥虫通常会导致慢性心脏和肠道炎症以及一种称为恰加斯病的功能障碍。先前的研究表明,患有慢性恰加斯病的动物心脏中的细胞浸润主要由CD8 + T细胞组成。在本研究中,我们使用免疫组织化学技术进一步表征了三种实验性恰加斯病小鼠模型中恰加斯性心脏病变的免疫性质。双重染色免疫组织化学显示,感染小鼠心脏中10 - 30%的浸润性CD8 + T细胞表达激活分子、白细胞介素-2受体和CD44。此外,在心脏病变中持续观察到大量产生肿瘤坏死因子-α、转化生长因子-β、白细胞介素-1α和白细胞介素-6的细胞,这些细胞在急性感染期间出现并在整个慢性感染阶段(> 300天)持续存在。相比之下,产生干扰素-γ和白细胞介素-10的细胞数量相对较少,仅在感染后约3至9周短暂出现。在感染期间的任何时间点,小鼠心脏中均未观察到产生白细胞介素-2、白细胞介素-4和白细胞介素-5的细胞。心脏中产生细胞因子的细胞的出现与I类和II类主要组织相容性复合体分子以及黏附分子(细胞间黏附分子-1、淋巴细胞功能相关抗原-1、极迟抗原-4和血管细胞黏附分子-1)的局部表达增加相关。本研究结果表明,恰加斯性心脏中的慢性炎症高度活跃,并且与从感染早期急性期到晚期慢性期的稳定免疫模式相关。心脏中细胞因子产生的模式与在淋巴器官中观察到的模式不同,并且不表明特定类别的细胞因子与疾病发展之间存在关联。相反,似乎炎症和抗炎细胞因子都决定了细胞反应的模式以及克氏锥虫感染中疾病的严重程度。