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1.
Heliyon ; 9(7): e17411, 2023 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37456044

RESUMEN

Cachexia is a life-threatening disease characterized by chronic, inflammatory muscle wasting and systemic metabolic impairment. Despite its high prevalence, there are no efficacious therapies for cachexia. Mice chronically infected with the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii represent a novel animal model recapitulating the chronic kinetics of cachexia. To understand how perturbations to metabolic tissue homeostasis influence circulating metabolite availability we used mass spectrometry analysis. Despite the significant reduction in circulating triacylglycerides, non-esterified fatty acids, and glycerol, sphingolipid long-chain bases and a subset of phosphatidylcholines (PCs) were significantly increased in the sera of mice with T. gondii infection-induced cachexia. In addition, the TCA cycle intermediates α-ketoglutarate, 2-hydroxyglutarate, succinate, fumarate, and malate were highly depleted in cachectic mouse sera. Sphingolipids and their de novo synthesis precursors PCs are the major components of the mitochondrial membrane and regulate mitochondrial function consistent with a causal relationship in the energy imbalance driving T. gondii-induced chronic cachexia.

2.
ACS Pharmacol Transl Sci ; 4(1): 128-142, 2021 Feb 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33615167

RESUMEN

The lymph node is a highly organized and dynamic structure that is critical for facilitating the intercellular interactions that constitute adaptive immunity. Most ex vivo studies of the lymph node begin by reducing it to a cell suspension, thus losing the spatial organization, or fixing it, thus losing the ability to make repeated measurements. Live murine lymph node tissue slices offer the potential to retain spatial complexity and dynamic accessibility, but their viability, level of immune activation, and retention of antigen-specific functions have not been validated. Here we systematically characterized live murine lymph node slices as a platform to study immunity. Live lymph node slices maintained the expected spatial organization and cell populations while reflecting the 3D spatial complexity of the organ. Slices collected under optimized conditions were comparable to cell suspensions in terms of both 24-h viability and inflammation. Slices responded to T cell receptor cross-linking with increased surface marker expression and cytokine secretion, in some cases more strongly than matched lymphocyte cultures. Furthermore, slices processed protein antigens, and slices from vaccinated animals responded to ex vivo challenge with antigen-specific cytokine secretion. In summary, lymph node slices provide a versatile platform to investigate immune functions in spatially organized tissue, enabling well-defined stimulation, time-course analysis, and parallel read-outs.

3.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 15724, 2020 09 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32973293

RESUMEN

Cachexia is a progressive muscle wasting disease that contributes to death in a wide range of chronic diseases. Currently, the cachexia field lacks animal models that recapitulate the long-term kinetics of clinical disease, which would provide insight into the pathophysiology of chronic cachexia and a tool to test therapeutics for disease reversal. Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) is a protozoan parasite that uses conserved mechanisms to infect rodents and human hosts. Infection is lifelong and has been associated with chronic weight loss and muscle atrophy in mice. We have recently shown that T. gondii-induced muscle atrophy meets the clinical definition of cachexia. Here, the longevity of the T. gondii-induced chronic cachexia model revealed that cachectic mice develop perivascular fibrosis in major metabolic organs, including the adipose tissue, skeletal muscle, and liver by 9 weeks post-infection. Development of cachexia, as well as liver and skeletal muscle fibrosis, is dependent on intact signaling through the type I IL-1R receptor. IL-1α is sufficient to activate cultured fibroblasts and primary hepatic stellate cells (myofibroblast precursors in the liver) in vitro, and IL-1α is elevated in the sera and liver of cachectic, suggesting a mechanism by which chronic IL-1R signaling could be leading to cachexia-associated fibrosis.


Asunto(s)
Caquexia/parasitología , Cirrosis Hepática/parasitología , Músculo Esquelético/parasitología , Receptores de Interleucina-1/metabolismo , Toxoplasmosis/complicaciones , Animales , Caquexia/metabolismo , Caquexia/patología , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Fibrosis/metabolismo , Fibrosis/patología , Células Estrelladas Hepáticas/efectos de los fármacos , Células Estrelladas Hepáticas/metabolismo , Interleucina-1alfa/farmacología , Cirrosis Hepática/metabolismo , Cirrosis Hepática/patología , Ratones , Músculo Esquelético/metabolismo , Músculo Esquelético/patología , Atrofia Muscular/metabolismo , Atrofia Muscular/parasitología , Atrofia Muscular/patología , Miofibroblastos/efectos de los fármacos , Miofibroblastos/metabolismo , Transducción de Señal/fisiología , Toxoplasmosis/metabolismo , Toxoplasmosis/patología
4.
J Immunol ; 204(12): 3329-3338, 2020 06 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32350081

RESUMEN

Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that establishes life-long infection in a wide range of hosts, including humans and rodents. To establish a chronic infection, pathogens often exploit the trade-off between resistance mechanisms, which promote inflammation and kill microbes, and tolerance mechanisms, which mitigate inflammatory stress. Signaling through the type I IL-1R has recently been shown to control disease tolerance pathways in endotoxemia and Salmonella infection. However, the role of the IL-1 axis in T. gondii infection is unclear. In this study we show that IL-1R-/- mice can control T. gondii burden throughout infection. Compared with wild-type mice, IL-1R-/- mice have more severe liver and adipose tissue pathology during acute infection, consistent with a role in acute disease tolerance. Surprisingly, IL-1R-/- mice had better long-term survival than wild-type mice during chronic infection. This was due to the ability of IL-1R-/- mice to recover from cachexia, an immune-metabolic disease of muscle wasting that impairs fitness of wild-type mice. Together, our data indicate a role for IL-1R as a regulator of host homeostasis and point to cachexia as a cost of long-term reliance on IL-1-mediated tolerance mechanisms.


Asunto(s)
Caquexia/inmunología , Tolerancia Inmunológica/inmunología , Receptores de Interleucina-1/inmunología , Toxoplasma/inmunología , Toxoplasmosis/inmunología , Animales , Caquexia/parasitología , Inflamación/inmunología , Inflamación/parasitología , Masculino , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Transducción de Señal/inmunología , Toxoplasmosis/parasitología
5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31245299

RESUMEN

Toxoplasma gondii is a successful protozoan parasite that cycles between definitive felid hosts and a broad range of intermediate hosts, including rodents and humans. Within intermediate hosts, this obligate intracellular parasite invades the small intestine, inducing an inflammatory response. Toxoplasma infects infiltrating immune cells, using them to spread systemically and reach tissues amenable to chronic infection. An intact immune system is necessary to control life-long chronic infection. Chronic infection is characterized by formation of parasite cysts, which are necessary for survival through the gastrointestinal tract of the next host. Thus, Toxoplasma must evade sterilizing immunity, but still rely on the host's immune response for survival and transmission. To do this, Toxoplasma exploits a central cost-benefit tradeoff in immunity: the need to escalate inflammation for pathogen clearance vs. the need to limit inflammation-induced bystander damage. What are the consequences of sustained inflammation on host biology? Many studies have focused on aspects of the immune response that directly target Toxoplasma growth and survival, commonly referred to as "resistance mechanisms." However, it is becoming clear that a parallel arm of the immune response has evolved to mitigate damage caused by the parasite directly (for example, egress-induced cell death) or bystander damage due to the inflammatory response (for example, reactive nitrogen species, degranulation). These so-called "disease tolerance" mechanisms promote tissue function and host survival without directly targeting the pathogen. Here we review changes to host metabolism, tissue structure, and immune function that point to disease tolerance mechanisms during Toxoplasma infection. We explore the impact tolerance programs have on the health of the host and parasite biology.


Asunto(s)
Resistencia a la Enfermedad/inmunología , Interacciones Huésped-Parásitos/inmunología , Toxoplasma/inmunología , Toxoplasmosis/inmunología , Animales , Interacciones Huésped-Parásitos/fisiología , Humanos , Tolerancia Inmunológica , Inmunidad Innata/inmunología , Inflamación , Toxoplasma/patogenicidad , Toxoplasma/fisiología , Toxoplasmosis/parasitología
6.
PLoS One ; 13(10): e0204895, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30379866

RESUMEN

Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite with a predation-mediated transmission cycle between rodents and felines. Intermediate hosts acquire Toxoplasma by eating parasite cysts which invade the small intestine, disseminate systemically and finally establish host life-long chronic infection in brain and muscles. Here we show that Toxoplasma infection can trigger a severe form of sustained cachexia: a disease of progressive lean weight loss that is a causal predictor of mortality in cancer, chronic disease and many infections. Toxoplasma cachexia is characterized by acute anorexia, systemic inflammation and loss of 20% body mass. Although mice recover from symptoms of peak sickness, they fail to regain muscle mass or visceral adipose depots. We asked whether the damage to the intestinal microenvironment observed at acute time points was sustained in chronic infection and could thereby play a role in sustaining cachexia. We found that parasites replicate in the same region of the distal jejunum/proximal ileum throughout acute infection, inducing the development of secondary lymphoid structures and severe, regional inflammation. Small intestine pathology was resolved by 5 weeks post-infection. However, changes in the commensal populations, notably an outgrowth of Clostridia spp., were sustained in chronic infection. Importantly, uninfected animals co-housed with infected mice display similar changes in commensal microflora but never display symptoms of cachexia, indicating that altered commensals are not sufficient to explain the cachexia phenotype alone. These studies indicate that Toxoplasma infection is a novel and robust model to study the immune-metabolic interactions that contribute to chronic cachexia development, pathology and potential reversal.


Asunto(s)
Bacterias/clasificación , Caquexia/etiología , Disbiosis/etiología , Toxoplasmosis Animal/complicaciones , Animales , Bacterias/genética , Bacterias/aislamiento & purificación , Caquexia/inmunología , Caquexia/veterinaria , Línea Celular , Citocinas/metabolismo , Disbiosis/inmunología , Disbiosis/veterinaria , Femenino , Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Masculino , Ratones , Fenotipo , Toxoplasma/patogenicidad , Toxoplasma/fisiología , Toxoplasmosis Animal/inmunología , Toxoplasmosis Animal/parasitología
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