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Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease

BACKGROUND: Vimentin is a main structural protein of the cell, a component of intermediate cell filaments and immersed in cytoplasm. Vimentin is mimicked by some bacterial proteins and anti-vimentin antibodies occur in autoimmune cardiac disease, as rheumatic fever. In this work we studied vimentin...

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Autores principales: Nascimento, Marilda Savoia, Stolf, Anna Maria Simonsen, de Andrade Junior, Heitor Franco, Pandey, Ramendra Pati, Umezawa, Eufrosina Setsu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5941957/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29538505
http://dx.doi.org/10.5935/abc.20180038
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author Nascimento, Marilda Savoia
Stolf, Anna Maria Simonsen
de Andrade Junior, Heitor Franco
Pandey, Ramendra Pati
Umezawa, Eufrosina Setsu
author_facet Nascimento, Marilda Savoia
Stolf, Anna Maria Simonsen
de Andrade Junior, Heitor Franco
Pandey, Ramendra Pati
Umezawa, Eufrosina Setsu
author_sort Nascimento, Marilda Savoia
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Vimentin is a main structural protein of the cell, a component of intermediate cell filaments and immersed in cytoplasm. Vimentin is mimicked by some bacterial proteins and anti-vimentin antibodies occur in autoimmune cardiac disease, as rheumatic fever. In this work we studied vimentin distribution on LLC-MK2 cells infected with T. cruzi and anti-vimentin antibodies in sera from several clinical pictures of Chagas' disease or American Trypanosomiasis, in order to elucidate any vimentin involvement in the humoral response of this pathology. OBJECTIVE: We standardized an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFI) to determine sub cellular expression in either parasites and host cells, and ELISA to evaluate anti-vimentin antibodies in sera fron chagasic patients. METHODS: We analyzed the distribution of vimentin in culture cells using indirect fluorescent assays, using as external controls anti-T. cruzi sera, derived from chronic infected patients for identification of the parasites in the same model. After infection and growth of T.cruzi amastigotes, those cells express larger amounts of vimentin, with heavy staining of cytoplasm outside the parasitophorous vacuole and some particle shadowing patterns, suggesting that vimentin are associated with cell cytoplasm. Anti-vimentin antibodies were present in most American trypanosomiasis samples, but notably, they are much more present in acute (76, 9%) or clinical defined syndromes, especially cardiac disease (87, 9%). Paradoxically, they were relatively infrequent in asymptomatic (25%) infected patients, which had a clearly positive serological reaction to parasite antigens, but had low frequency of anti-vimentin antibodies, similar to controls (2,5%). CONCLUSION: Our current data revealed that anti-vimentin antibodies induced during T. cruzi infection could be a marker of active disease in the host and its levels could also justify drug therapy in American Trypanosomiasis chronic infection, as a large group of asymptomatic patients would be submitted to treatment with frequent adverse reactions of the available drugs. Anti-vimentin antibodies could be a marker of cardiac muscle cell damage, appearing in American Trypanosomiasis patients during active muscle cell damage.
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spelling pubmed-59419572018-05-14 Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease Nascimento, Marilda Savoia Stolf, Anna Maria Simonsen de Andrade Junior, Heitor Franco Pandey, Ramendra Pati Umezawa, Eufrosina Setsu Arq Bras Cardiol Original Article BACKGROUND: Vimentin is a main structural protein of the cell, a component of intermediate cell filaments and immersed in cytoplasm. Vimentin is mimicked by some bacterial proteins and anti-vimentin antibodies occur in autoimmune cardiac disease, as rheumatic fever. In this work we studied vimentin distribution on LLC-MK2 cells infected with T. cruzi and anti-vimentin antibodies in sera from several clinical pictures of Chagas' disease or American Trypanosomiasis, in order to elucidate any vimentin involvement in the humoral response of this pathology. OBJECTIVE: We standardized an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFI) to determine sub cellular expression in either parasites and host cells, and ELISA to evaluate anti-vimentin antibodies in sera fron chagasic patients. METHODS: We analyzed the distribution of vimentin in culture cells using indirect fluorescent assays, using as external controls anti-T. cruzi sera, derived from chronic infected patients for identification of the parasites in the same model. After infection and growth of T.cruzi amastigotes, those cells express larger amounts of vimentin, with heavy staining of cytoplasm outside the parasitophorous vacuole and some particle shadowing patterns, suggesting that vimentin are associated with cell cytoplasm. Anti-vimentin antibodies were present in most American trypanosomiasis samples, but notably, they are much more present in acute (76, 9%) or clinical defined syndromes, especially cardiac disease (87, 9%). Paradoxically, they were relatively infrequent in asymptomatic (25%) infected patients, which had a clearly positive serological reaction to parasite antigens, but had low frequency of anti-vimentin antibodies, similar to controls (2,5%). CONCLUSION: Our current data revealed that anti-vimentin antibodies induced during T. cruzi infection could be a marker of active disease in the host and its levels could also justify drug therapy in American Trypanosomiasis chronic infection, as a large group of asymptomatic patients would be submitted to treatment with frequent adverse reactions of the available drugs. Anti-vimentin antibodies could be a marker of cardiac muscle cell damage, appearing in American Trypanosomiasis patients during active muscle cell damage. Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC 2018-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5941957/ /pubmed/29538505 http://dx.doi.org/10.5935/abc.20180038 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Nascimento, Marilda Savoia
Stolf, Anna Maria Simonsen
de Andrade Junior, Heitor Franco
Pandey, Ramendra Pati
Umezawa, Eufrosina Setsu
Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease
title Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease
title_full Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease
title_fullStr Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease
title_full_unstemmed Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease
title_short Vimentin and Anti Vimentin Antibodies in Chagas' Disease
title_sort vimentin and anti vimentin antibodies in chagas' disease
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5941957/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29538505
http://dx.doi.org/10.5935/abc.20180038
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