Author:
Rodrigues Wellington Francisco,Miguel Camila Botelho,Marques Laís Corrêa,da Costa Thiago Alvares,de Abreu Melissa Carvalho Martins,Oliveira Carlo José Freire,Lazo-Chica Javier Emilio
Abstract
In Chagas disease, the initial responses of phagocyte-mediated innate immunity are strongly associated with the control ofTrypanosoma cruziand are mediated by various signaling pathways, including the inducible nitric oxide synthetase (iNOS) pathway. The clinical and laboratory manifestations of Chagas disease depend on the parasite–host relationship, i.e., the responsive capacity of the host immune system and the immunogenicity of the parasite. Here, we evaluated effect sizes in clinical and laboratory parameters mediated by acute infection with different concentrations ofT. cruziinoculum in mice immunosuppressedviaiNOS pathway inactivation. Infection was induced in C57BL/6 wild-type and iNOS-/-mice with the “Y” strain ofT. cruziat three inoculum concentrations (3 × 102, 3 × 103, and 3 × 104). Parasitemia and mortality in both mouse strains were monitored. Immunohistochemistry was performed to quantify amastigotes in cardiac tissues and cardiac musculature cells. Biochemical parameters, such as blood urea nitrogen, sodium, albumin, and globulin concentrations, among others, were measured, and cytokine concentrations were also measured. Effect sizes were determined by the eta squared formula. Compared with that in wild-type animals, mice with an absence of iNOS expression demonstrated a greater parasite load, with earlier infection and a delayed parasitemia peak. Inoculum concentration was positively related to death in the immunosuppressed subgroup. Nineteen parameters (hematological, biochemical, cytokine-related, and histopathological) in the immunocompetent subgroup and four in the immunosuppressed subgroup were associated with parasitemia. Parasitemia, biochemical parameters, and hematological parameters were found to be predictors in the knockout group. The impact of effect sizes on the markers evaluated based onT. cruziinoculum concentration was notably high in the immunocompetent group (Cohen’sd= 88.50%;p<.001). These findings contribute to the understanding of physiopathogenic mechanisms underlyingT. cruziinfection and also indicate the influence of the concentration ofT. cruziduring infection and the immunosuppression through the iNOS pathway in clinical laboratory heterogeneity reported in acute Chagas disease.
Funder
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
1 articles.
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