Article
Serum and aqueous humour cytokine response and histopathological alterations during ocular Toxoplasma gondii infection in C57BL/6 mice
Registro en:
CALABRESE, Katia da Silva et al. Serum and aqueous humour cytokine response and histopathological alterations during ocular Toxoplasma gondii infection in C57BL/6 mice. Micron, v. 39, p. 1335-1341, 2008.
0968-4328
10.1016/j.micron.2008.02.003
1878-4291
Autor
Calabrese, K. S.
Tedesco, R. C.
Valle, T. Zaverucha do
Barbosa, Helene S.
Resumen
Toxoplasma gondii, an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite, infects most species of warm-blooded animals, and in humans it causes
toxoplasmosis. Healthy people that become infected rarely present clinical symptoms because the immune system prevents the parasite from
causing illness. Congenital toxoplasmosis may result in abortion, hydrocephalus, as well as neurological and ocular disease (most frequently
retinochoroiditis) of the newborn. In immunocompromised patients, reactivation of latent disease can cause encephalitis. Cell-mediated immunity
to T. gondii antigens involves innate acute inflammatory responses and antigen-specific adaptive immunity. Considering the complexity of the
immunological events triggered during toxoplasmosis, systemic and local responses were evaluated by cytokine measurements. Aqueous humour
and serum were obtained from non-infected and T. gondii Me-49 strain infected C57BL/6 mice for cytokine quantification. Histopathological
analyses were made with eyes enucleated from mice after 30 days of infection. ELISA assays showed an increase of IFN-g levels both in serum and
aqueous humour of infected mice in opposition to a decrease in IL-10 levels. On the other hand, TGF-b was high, whereas IL-12 and TNF-a were
present in small levels in both groups. We also detected higher levels of IL-4 and IL-6 in aqueous humour than in serum of infected mice when
compared to the control group. MIP-2 presented no significant differences between the two groups. Fas and Fas-L were also present in similar
levels in serum of non-infected and infected mice, but both chemokines were increased in the aqueous humour of infected mice. Histopathological
analysis of infected mice showed inflammatory infiltrates around blood vessels and alteration of the outer photoreceptor segments, on the external
and inner nuclear layer. Parasites were observed in 82% of eyes, inside the blood vessels associated with inflammatory infiltrate. Edema,
characterized by the increase of interstitial spaces between the FTR, forming lacunae was also noted. These alterations take the form of projections
(retino-vitreal), characteristic of retinochoroiditis. In conclusion, T. gondii infection of C57BL/6 mice revealed that cytokine patterns alone do not
assure susceptibility or resistance against infection, thus reinforcing the notion that it is necessary more than cytokine dosage to determine Th1 or
Th2 profile in this model. 2022-01-01