Heligmosomoides bakeri and Toxoplasma gondii co-infection leads to increased mortality associated with changes in immune resistance in the lymphoid compartment and disease pathology

Author:

Szabo Edina K.,Bowhay Christina,Forrester Emma,Liu Holly,Dong Beverly,Coria Aralia LeonORCID,Perera Shashini,Fung Beatrice,Badawadagi Namratha,Gaio Camila,Bailey KaylaORCID,Ritz Manfred,Bowron Joel,Ariyaratne Anupama,Finney Constance A. M.ORCID

Abstract

Co-infections are a common reality but understanding how the immune system responds in this context is complex and can be unpredictable. Heligmosomoides bakeri (parasitic roundworm, previously Heligmosomoides polygyrus) and Toxoplasma gondii (protozoan parasite) are well studied organisms that stimulate a characteristic Th2 and Th1 response, respectively. Several studies have demonstrated reduced inflammatory cytokine responses in animals co-infected with such organisms. However, while general cytokine signatures have been examined, the impact of the different cytokine producing lymphocytes on parasite control/clearance is not fully understood. We investigated five different lymphocyte populations (NK, NKT, γδ T, CD4+ T and CD8+ T cells), five organs (small intestine, Peyer’s patches, mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen and liver), and 4 cytokines (IFN©, IL-4, IL-10 and IL-13) at two different time points (days 5 and 10 post T. gondii infection). We found that co-infected animals had significantly higher mortality than either single infection. This was accompanied by transient and local changes in parasite loads and cytokine profiles. Despite the early changes in lymphocyte and cytokine profiles, severe intestinal pathology in co-infected mice likely contributed to early mortality due to significant damage by both parasites in the small intestine. Our work demonstrates the importance of taking a broad view during infection research, studying multiple cell types, organs/tissues and time points to link and/or uncouple immunological from pathological findings. Our results provide insights into how co-infection with parasites stimulating different arms of the immune system can lead to drastic changes in infection dynamics.

Funder

CFI JELF Grant

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant

NSERC Create in Host Parasite Interactions Scholarship

University of Calgary Markin scholarship

University of Calgary PURE Scholarship

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Graduate Scholarship

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Summer Studentship

Mitacs Globalinks Scholarships

Alberta Graduate Excellence Scholarship

UCalgary Eyes High Postdoctoral Scholarship

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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