Localized cardiac small molecule trajectories and persistent chemical sequelae in experimental Chagas disease

Author:

Liu Zongyuan,Ulrich vonBargen Rebecca,Kendricks April L.,Wheeler Kate,Leão Ana Carolina,Sankaranarayanan KrithivasanORCID,Dean Danya A.,Kane Shelley S.,Hossain Ekram,Pollet JeroenORCID,Bottazzi Maria ElenaORCID,Hotez Peter J.,Jones Kathryn M.ORCID,McCall Laura-IsobelORCID

Abstract

AbstractPost-infectious conditions present major health burdens but remain poorly understood. In Chagas disease (CD), caused by Trypanosoma cruzi parasites, antiparasitic agents that successfully clear T. cruzi do not always improve clinical outcomes. In this study, we reveal differential small molecule trajectories between cardiac regions during chronic T. cruzi infection, matching with characteristic CD apical aneurysm sites. Incomplete, region-specific, cardiac small molecule restoration is observed in animals treated with the antiparasitic benznidazole. In contrast, superior restoration of the cardiac small molecule profile is observed for a combination treatment of reduced-dose benznidazole plus an immunotherapy, even with less parasite burden reduction. Overall, these results reveal molecular mechanisms of CD treatment based on simultaneous effects on the pathogen and on host small molecule responses, and expand our understanding of clinical treatment failure in CD. This link between infection and subsequent persistent small molecule perturbation broadens our understanding of infectious disease sequelae.

Funder

Burroughs Wellcome Fund

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

Southern Star Medical Research Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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