Cargando…

Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection

BACKGROUND: Worldwide, approximately two billion people are chronically infected with Toxoplasma gondii with largely unknown consequences. METHODS: To better understand long-term effects and pathogenesis of this common, persistent brain infection, mice were infected at a time in human years equivale...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hermes, Gretchen, Ajioka, James W, Kelly, Krystyna A, Mui, Ernest, Roberts, Fiona, Kasza, Kristen, Mayr, Thomas, Kirisits, Michael J, Wollmann, Robert, Ferguson, David JP, Roberts, Craig W, Hwang, Jong-Hee, Trendler, Toria, Kennan, Richard P, Suzuki, Yasuhiro, Reardon, Catherine, Hickey, William F, Chen, Lieping, McLeod, Rima
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2588578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18947414
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-2094-5-48
_version_ 1782160956230467584
author Hermes, Gretchen
Ajioka, James W
Kelly, Krystyna A
Mui, Ernest
Roberts, Fiona
Kasza, Kristen
Mayr, Thomas
Kirisits, Michael J
Wollmann, Robert
Ferguson, David JP
Roberts, Craig W
Hwang, Jong-Hee
Trendler, Toria
Kennan, Richard P
Suzuki, Yasuhiro
Reardon, Catherine
Hickey, William F
Chen, Lieping
McLeod, Rima
author_facet Hermes, Gretchen
Ajioka, James W
Kelly, Krystyna A
Mui, Ernest
Roberts, Fiona
Kasza, Kristen
Mayr, Thomas
Kirisits, Michael J
Wollmann, Robert
Ferguson, David JP
Roberts, Craig W
Hwang, Jong-Hee
Trendler, Toria
Kennan, Richard P
Suzuki, Yasuhiro
Reardon, Catherine
Hickey, William F
Chen, Lieping
McLeod, Rima
author_sort Hermes, Gretchen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Worldwide, approximately two billion people are chronically infected with Toxoplasma gondii with largely unknown consequences. METHODS: To better understand long-term effects and pathogenesis of this common, persistent brain infection, mice were infected at a time in human years equivalent to early to mid adulthood and studied 5–12 months later. Appearance, behavior, neurologic function and brain MRIs were studied. Additional analyses of pathogenesis included: correlation of brain weight and neurologic findings; histopathology focusing on brain regions; full genome microarrays; immunohistochemistry characterizing inflammatory cells; determination of presence of tachyzoites and bradyzoites; electron microscopy; and study of markers of inflammation in serum. Histopathology in genetically resistant mice and cytokine and NRAMP knockout mice, effects of inoculation of isolated parasites, and treatment with sulfadiazine or αPD1 ligand were studied. RESULTS: Twelve months after infection, a time equivalent to middle to early elderly ages, mice had behavioral and neurological deficits, and brain MRIs showed mild to moderate ventricular dilatation. Lower brain weight correlated with greater magnitude of neurologic abnormalities and inflammation. Full genome microarrays of brains reflected inflammation causing neuronal damage (Gfap), effects on host cell protein processing (ubiquitin ligase), synapse remodeling (Complement 1q), and also increased expression of PD-1L (a ligand that allows persistent LCMV brain infection) and CD 36 (a fatty acid translocase and oxidized LDL receptor that mediates innate immune response to beta amyloid which is associated with pro-inflammation in Alzheimer's disease). Immunostaining detected no inflammation around intra-neuronal cysts, practically no free tachyzoites, and only rare bradyzoites. Nonetheless, there were perivascular, leptomeningeal inflammatory cells, particularly contiguous to the aqueduct of Sylvius and hippocampus, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and activated microglia in perivascular areas and brain parenchyma. Genetically resistant, chronically infected mice had substantially less inflammation. CONCLUSION: In outbred mice, chronic, adult acquired T. gondii infection causes neurologic and behavioral abnormalities secondary to inflammation and loss of brain parenchyma. Perivascular inflammation is prominent particularly contiguous to the aqueduct of Sylvius and hippocampus. Even resistant mice have perivascular inflammation. This mouse model of chronic T. gondii infection raises questions of whether persistence of this parasite in brain can cause inflammation or neurodegeneration in genetically susceptible hosts.
format Text
id pubmed-2588578
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25885782008-11-28 Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection Hermes, Gretchen Ajioka, James W Kelly, Krystyna A Mui, Ernest Roberts, Fiona Kasza, Kristen Mayr, Thomas Kirisits, Michael J Wollmann, Robert Ferguson, David JP Roberts, Craig W Hwang, Jong-Hee Trendler, Toria Kennan, Richard P Suzuki, Yasuhiro Reardon, Catherine Hickey, William F Chen, Lieping McLeod, Rima J Neuroinflammation Research BACKGROUND: Worldwide, approximately two billion people are chronically infected with Toxoplasma gondii with largely unknown consequences. METHODS: To better understand long-term effects and pathogenesis of this common, persistent brain infection, mice were infected at a time in human years equivalent to early to mid adulthood and studied 5–12 months later. Appearance, behavior, neurologic function and brain MRIs were studied. Additional analyses of pathogenesis included: correlation of brain weight and neurologic findings; histopathology focusing on brain regions; full genome microarrays; immunohistochemistry characterizing inflammatory cells; determination of presence of tachyzoites and bradyzoites; electron microscopy; and study of markers of inflammation in serum. Histopathology in genetically resistant mice and cytokine and NRAMP knockout mice, effects of inoculation of isolated parasites, and treatment with sulfadiazine or αPD1 ligand were studied. RESULTS: Twelve months after infection, a time equivalent to middle to early elderly ages, mice had behavioral and neurological deficits, and brain MRIs showed mild to moderate ventricular dilatation. Lower brain weight correlated with greater magnitude of neurologic abnormalities and inflammation. Full genome microarrays of brains reflected inflammation causing neuronal damage (Gfap), effects on host cell protein processing (ubiquitin ligase), synapse remodeling (Complement 1q), and also increased expression of PD-1L (a ligand that allows persistent LCMV brain infection) and CD 36 (a fatty acid translocase and oxidized LDL receptor that mediates innate immune response to beta amyloid which is associated with pro-inflammation in Alzheimer's disease). Immunostaining detected no inflammation around intra-neuronal cysts, practically no free tachyzoites, and only rare bradyzoites. Nonetheless, there were perivascular, leptomeningeal inflammatory cells, particularly contiguous to the aqueduct of Sylvius and hippocampus, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and activated microglia in perivascular areas and brain parenchyma. Genetically resistant, chronically infected mice had substantially less inflammation. CONCLUSION: In outbred mice, chronic, adult acquired T. gondii infection causes neurologic and behavioral abnormalities secondary to inflammation and loss of brain parenchyma. Perivascular inflammation is prominent particularly contiguous to the aqueduct of Sylvius and hippocampus. Even resistant mice have perivascular inflammation. This mouse model of chronic T. gondii infection raises questions of whether persistence of this parasite in brain can cause inflammation or neurodegeneration in genetically susceptible hosts. BioMed Central 2008-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2588578/ /pubmed/18947414 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-2094-5-48 Text en Copyright © 2008 Hermes et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Hermes, Gretchen
Ajioka, James W
Kelly, Krystyna A
Mui, Ernest
Roberts, Fiona
Kasza, Kristen
Mayr, Thomas
Kirisits, Michael J
Wollmann, Robert
Ferguson, David JP
Roberts, Craig W
Hwang, Jong-Hee
Trendler, Toria
Kennan, Richard P
Suzuki, Yasuhiro
Reardon, Catherine
Hickey, William F
Chen, Lieping
McLeod, Rima
Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
title Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
title_full Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
title_fullStr Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
title_full_unstemmed Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
title_short Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
title_sort neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2588578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18947414
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-2094-5-48
work_keys_str_mv AT hermesgretchen neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT ajiokajamesw neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT kellykrystynaa neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT muiernest neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT robertsfiona neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT kaszakristen neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT mayrthomas neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT kirisitsmichaelj neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT wollmannrobert neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT fergusondavidjp neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT robertscraigw neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT hwangjonghee neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT trendlertoria neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT kennanrichardp neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT suzukiyasuhiro neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT reardoncatherine neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT hickeywilliamf neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT chenlieping neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection
AT mcleodrima neurologicalandbehavioralabnormalitiesventriculardilatationalteredcellularfunctionsinflammationandneuronalinjuryinbrainsofmiceduetocommonpersistentparasiticinfection