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Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis

Cysticidal treatment of neurocysticercosis, an infection of humans and pig brains with Taenia solium, results in an early inflammatory response directed to cysts causing seizures and focal neurological manifestations. Treatment-induced pericystic inflammation and its association with blood brain bar...

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Autores principales: Mahanty, Siddhartha, Orrego, Miguel Angel, Mayta, Holger, Marzal, Miguel, Cangalaya, Carla, Paredes, Adriana, Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy, Arroyo, Gianfranco, Gonzalez, Armando E., Guerra-Giraldez, Cristina, García, Hector H., Nash, Theodore E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361613/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25774662
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003577
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author Mahanty, Siddhartha
Orrego, Miguel Angel
Mayta, Holger
Marzal, Miguel
Cangalaya, Carla
Paredes, Adriana
Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy
Arroyo, Gianfranco
Gonzalez, Armando E.
Guerra-Giraldez, Cristina
García, Hector H.
Nash, Theodore E.
author_facet Mahanty, Siddhartha
Orrego, Miguel Angel
Mayta, Holger
Marzal, Miguel
Cangalaya, Carla
Paredes, Adriana
Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy
Arroyo, Gianfranco
Gonzalez, Armando E.
Guerra-Giraldez, Cristina
García, Hector H.
Nash, Theodore E.
author_sort Mahanty, Siddhartha
collection PubMed
description Cysticidal treatment of neurocysticercosis, an infection of humans and pig brains with Taenia solium, results in an early inflammatory response directed to cysts causing seizures and focal neurological manifestations. Treatment-induced pericystic inflammation and its association with blood brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, as determined by Evans blue (EB) extravasation, was studied in infected untreated and anthelmintic-treated pigs. We compared the magnitude and extent of the pericystic inflammation, presence of EB-stained capsules, the level of damage to the parasite, expression of genes for proinflammatory and regulatory cytokines, chemokines, and tissue remodeling by quantitative PCR assays between treated and untreated infected pigs and between EB-stained (blue) and non stained (clear) cysts. Inflammatory scores were higher in pericystic tissues from EB-stained cysts compared to clear cysts from untreated pigs and also from anthelmintic-treated pigs 48 hr and 120 hr after treatment. The degree of inflammation correlated with the severity of cyst wall damage and both increased significantly at 120 hours. Expression levels of the proinflammatory genes for IL-6, IFN-γ, TNF-α were higher in EB-stained cysts compared to clear cysts and unaffected brain tissues, and were generally highest at 120 hr. Additionally, expression of some markers of immunoregulatory activity (IL-10, IL-2Rα) were decreased in EB-stained capsules. An increase in other markers for regulatory T cells (CTLA4, FoxP3) was found, as well as significant increases in expression of two metalloproteases, MMP1 and MMP2 at 48 hr and 120 hr post-treatment. We conclude that the increase in severity of the inflammation caused by treatment is accompanied by both a proinflammatory and a complex regulatory response, largely limited to pericystic tissues with compromised vascular integrity. Because treatment induced inflammation occurs in porcine NCC similar to that in human cases, this model can be used to investigate mechanisms involved in host damaging inflammatory responses and agents or modalities that may control damaging post treatment inflammation.
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spelling pubmed-43616132015-03-23 Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis Mahanty, Siddhartha Orrego, Miguel Angel Mayta, Holger Marzal, Miguel Cangalaya, Carla Paredes, Adriana Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy Arroyo, Gianfranco Gonzalez, Armando E. Guerra-Giraldez, Cristina García, Hector H. Nash, Theodore E. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Cysticidal treatment of neurocysticercosis, an infection of humans and pig brains with Taenia solium, results in an early inflammatory response directed to cysts causing seizures and focal neurological manifestations. Treatment-induced pericystic inflammation and its association with blood brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, as determined by Evans blue (EB) extravasation, was studied in infected untreated and anthelmintic-treated pigs. We compared the magnitude and extent of the pericystic inflammation, presence of EB-stained capsules, the level of damage to the parasite, expression of genes for proinflammatory and regulatory cytokines, chemokines, and tissue remodeling by quantitative PCR assays between treated and untreated infected pigs and between EB-stained (blue) and non stained (clear) cysts. Inflammatory scores were higher in pericystic tissues from EB-stained cysts compared to clear cysts from untreated pigs and also from anthelmintic-treated pigs 48 hr and 120 hr after treatment. The degree of inflammation correlated with the severity of cyst wall damage and both increased significantly at 120 hours. Expression levels of the proinflammatory genes for IL-6, IFN-γ, TNF-α were higher in EB-stained cysts compared to clear cysts and unaffected brain tissues, and were generally highest at 120 hr. Additionally, expression of some markers of immunoregulatory activity (IL-10, IL-2Rα) were decreased in EB-stained capsules. An increase in other markers for regulatory T cells (CTLA4, FoxP3) was found, as well as significant increases in expression of two metalloproteases, MMP1 and MMP2 at 48 hr and 120 hr post-treatment. We conclude that the increase in severity of the inflammation caused by treatment is accompanied by both a proinflammatory and a complex regulatory response, largely limited to pericystic tissues with compromised vascular integrity. Because treatment induced inflammation occurs in porcine NCC similar to that in human cases, this model can be used to investigate mechanisms involved in host damaging inflammatory responses and agents or modalities that may control damaging post treatment inflammation. Public Library of Science 2015-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4361613/ /pubmed/25774662 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003577 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mahanty, Siddhartha
Orrego, Miguel Angel
Mayta, Holger
Marzal, Miguel
Cangalaya, Carla
Paredes, Adriana
Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy
Arroyo, Gianfranco
Gonzalez, Armando E.
Guerra-Giraldez, Cristina
García, Hector H.
Nash, Theodore E.
Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis
title Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis
title_full Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis
title_fullStr Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis
title_full_unstemmed Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis
title_short Post-treatment Vascular Leakage and Inflammatory Responses around Brain Cysts in Porcine Neurocysticercosis
title_sort post-treatment vascular leakage and inflammatory responses around brain cysts in porcine neurocysticercosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361613/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25774662
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003577
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