4.4 Article

Gene Expression Profiling and Functional Characterization of Macrophages in Response to Circulatory Microparticles Produced during Trypanosoma cruzi Infection and Chagas Disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF INNATE IMMUNITY
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 203-216

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000451055

Keywords

Chagasic cardiomyopathy; Microparticles; Metabolic inflammatory gene expression profile; Macrophage activation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R01 AI054578, R21 AI107227]
  3. National Heart Lung Blood Institute [R01 HL094802]
  4. Summer Undergraduate Research Program and Sealy Center
  5. McLaughlin Endowment (UTMB)
  6. American Heart Association pre-doc fellowships
  7. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET), Argentina

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Chronic inflammation and oxidative stress are hallmarks of chagasic cardiomyopathy (CCM). In this study, we determined if microparticles (MPs) generated during Trypanosoma cruzi (Tc) infection carry the host's signature of the inflammatory/oxidative state and provide information regarding the progression of clinical disease. Methods: MPs were harvested from supernatants of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells in vitro incubated with Tc (control: LPS treated), plasma of seropositive humans with a clinically asymptomatic (CA) or symptomatic (CS) disease state (vs. normal/healthy [NH] controls), and plasma of mice immunized with a protective vaccine before challenge infection (control: unvaccinated/infected). Macrophages (mfs) were incubated with MPs, and we probed the gene expression profile using the inflammatory signaling cascade and cytokine/chemokine arrays, phenotypic markers of mf activation by flow cytometry, cytokine profile by means of an ELISA and Bioplex assay, and oxidative/nitrosative stress and mitotoxicity by means of colorimetric and fluorometric assays. Results: Tc- and LPS-induced MPs stimulated proliferation, inflammatory gene expression profile, and nitric oxide ((NO)-N-center dot) release in human THP-1 mfs. LPS-MPs were more immunostimulatory than Tc-MPs. Endothelial cells, T lymphocytes, and mfs were the major source of MPs shed in the plasma of chagasic humans and experimentally infected mice. The CS and CA (vs. NH) MPs elicited >2-fold increase in NO and mitochondrial oxidative stress in THP-1 mfs; however, CS (vs. CA) MPs elicited a more pronounced and disease-state-specific inflammatory gene expression profile (IKBKB, NR3C1, and TIRAP vs. CCR4, EGR2, and CCL3), cytokine release (IL-2 +IFN-gamma > GCSF), and surface markers of m phi activation (CD14 and CD16). The circulatory MPs of nonvaccinated/infected mice induced 7.5-fold and 40% increases in (NO)-N-center dot and IFN-gamma production, respectively, while these responses were abolished when RAW264.7 m phi s were incubated with circulatory MPs of vaccinated/infected mice. Conclusion: Circulating MPs reflect in vivo levels of an oxidative, nitrosative, and inflammatory state, and have potential utility in evaluating disease severity and the efficacy of vaccines and drug therapies against CCM. (C) 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available