4.7 Article

The Impact of the CTHRSSVVC Peptide Upon Experimental Models of Trypanosoma cruzi Infection

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.882555

Keywords

Chagas disease; Trypanosoma cruzi; experimental chemotherapy; CTHRSSVVC peptide; immunomodulation

Funding

  1. Carlos Chagas Filho Foundation

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The synthetic peptides PepA and PepB were found to reduce the intracellular parasitism of T. cruzi in macrophages (PMM), but were ineffective against cardiac cells. However, they did not exhibit trypanocidal effects on bloodstream trypomastigotes, nor showed in vivo efficacy when administered after parasite inoculation.
Chagas disease (CD), caused by the hemoflagellate protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, affects more than six million people worldwide and presents an unsatisfactory therapy, based on two nitroderivatives, introduced in clinical medicine for decades. The synthetic peptide, with CTHRSSVVC sequence (PepA), mimics the CD163 and TNF-alpha tripeptide RSS motif and binds to atheromatous plaques in carotid biopsies of human patients, spleen tissues, and a low-density lipoprotein receptor knockout (LDLr-/-) mouse model of atherosclerosis. CD163 receptor is present on monocytes, macrophages, and neutrophils, acting as a regulator of acute-phase processes and modulating aspects of the inflammatory response and the establishment of infections. Due to the potential theranostic role of PepA, our aim was to investigate its effect upon T. cruzi infection in vitro and in vivo. PepA and two other peptides with shuffled sequences were assayed upon different binomials of host cell/parasite, including professional [as peritoneal mouse macrophages (PMM)] and non-professional phagocytes [primary cultures of cardiac cells (CM)], under different protocols. Also, their impact was further addressed in vivo using a mouse model of acute experimental Chagas disease. Our in-vitro findings demonstrate that PepA and PepB (the peptide with random sequence retaining the RS sequence) reduced the intracellular parasitism of the PMM but were inactive during the infection of cardiac cells. Another set of in-vitro and in-vivo studies showed that they do not display a trypanocidal effect on bloodstream trypomastigotes nor exhibit in-vivo efficacy when administered after the parasite inoculation. Our data report the in-vitro activity of PepA and PepB upon the infection of PMM by T. cruzi, possibly triggering the microbicidal arsenal of the host professional phagocytes, capable of controlling parasitic invasion and proliferation.

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