Article
Fas ligand-dependent inflammatory regulation in acute myocarditis induced by Trypanosoma cruzi infection
Registro en:
OLIVEIRA, Gabriel Melo de et al. Fas Ligand-Dependent Inflammatory Regulation in Acute Myocarditis Induced by Trypanosoma cruzi Infection. American Journal of Pathology, v. 171, n. 1, p. 79-86, July 2007.
0002-9440
10.2353/ajpath.2007.060643
1525-2191
Autor
Oliveira, Gabriel Melo de
Diniz, Rafaela Lopes
Batista, Wanderson
Batista, Marcelo Meuser
Correa, Cristiane Bani
Araujo-Jorge, Tania C.
Henriques-Pons, Andréa
Resumen
Fas/Fas ligand (Fas-L) engagement, a potent inducer of apoptosis, is also important for cellular activation, regulation of effector and chemotactic activity, and secretion of chemokines and cytokines. We evaluated the relevance of Fas/Fas-L in the regulation of myocarditis induced by Trypanosoma cruzi infection and observed that in Fas-L(-/-) mice (gld/gld), cardiac infiltration was significantly reduced, accordingly showing less cardiomyocyte destruction. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis of cardiac inflammatory cells showed higher numbers of CD8(+) T cells in BALB/c compared with gld/gld mice but similar levels of lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1, intercellular adhesion molecule, CD2, and CD69 expression; MAC-1(+) myeloid cells and mast cells were increased in BALB/c mice, whereas gld/gld mice exhibited an enrichment of CD4(+/low) T cells. Intracellular labeling of cytokines revealed no clear cardiac skewing of Th1 or Th2 responses, but we found a higher number of interleukin-10(+) cells in gld/gld mice and a deficient expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 on cardiac endothelial cells in gld/gld mice. Finally, we found a population of CD3(+) but CD4/CD8 double negative cardiac T cells in both groups of infected mice, but down-regulation of some adhesion molecules and surface receptors was only observed in gld/gld mice, indicating a targeted T-cell population mostly affected by the lack of Fas-L engagement. These results point to a role for myocarditis regulation by Fas/Fas-L beyond its possible direct relevance in cellular death. 2022-01-01