Article
Trans-sialidase from Trypanosoma cruzi enhances the adhesion properties and fibronectin-driven migration of thymocytes
Registro en:
NARDY, Ana Flávia F. R. et al. Trans-sialidase from Trypanosoma cruzi enhances the adhesion properties and fibronectin-driven migration of thymocytes. Microbes and Infection, v. 15, p.365e374, 2013.
1286-4579
10.1016/j.micinf.2013.02.003
Autor
Nardy, Ana Flávia F. R.
Silva Filho, João Luiz da
Pérez, Ana Rosa
Meis, Juliana de
Oliveira, Désio Aurélio Farias de
Penha, Luciana
Oliveira, Isadora de Araújo
Dias, Wagner B.
Todeschini, Adriane R.
Lima, Celio Geraldo Freire de
Bellio, Maria
Neves, Celso Caruso
Pinheiro, Ana Acácia
Takiya, Christina Maeda
Bottasso, Oscar
Savino, Wilson
Morrot, Alexandre
Resumen
In experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infections, severe thymic atrophy leads to release of activated CD4
þ
CD8
þ
double-positive (DP) T cells
to the periphery. In humans, activated DP T cells are found in the blood in association with severe cardiac forms of human chronic Chagas
disease. The mechanisms underlying the premature thymocyte release during the chagasic thymic atrophy remain elusive. We tested whether the
migratory properties of intrathymic thymocytes are modulated by the parasite trans-sialidase (TS). We found that TS affected the dynamics of
thymocytes undergoing intrathymic maturation, and these changes were accompanied by an increase in the number of recent DP thymic emigrants
in the peripheral lymphoid organs. We demonstrated that increased percentages of blood DP T cell subsets were associated with
augmented antibody titers against TS in chagasic patients with chronic cardiomyopathy. In vitro studies showed that TS was able to activate the
MAPK pathway and actin filament mobilization in thymocytes. These effects were correlated with its ability to modulate the adhesion of
thymocytes to thymic epithelial cells and their migration toward extracellular matrix. These findings point to effects of TS that could influence
the escape of immature thymocytes in Chagas disease.