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Infect Immun, June 1998, p. 2960-2968, Vol. 66, No. 6
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Trypanosoma cruzi Infection in Tumor Necrosis Factor
Receptor p55-Deficient Mice
Esmeralda
Castaños-Velez,1
Stephanie
Maerlan,2
Lyda M.
Osorio,2
Frederik
Åberg,3
Peter
Biberfeld,1
Anders
Örn,2 and
Martín E.
Rottenberg2,*
Department of
Pathology,1
Microbiology and
Tumorbiology Center,2 and
Department
of Neurosciences,3 Karolinska Institute,
Stockholm, Sweden
Received 15 October 1997/Returned for modification 15 December
1997/Accepted 18 March 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Tumor necrosis factor receptor p55 (TNFRp55) mediates host
resistance to several pathogens by allowing microbicidal activities of
phagocytes. In the studies reported here, TNFRp55
/
mice
infected with the intracellular parasite Trypanosoma cruzi showed clearly higher parasitemia and cumulative mortality than wild-type (WT) controls did. However, gamma interferon
(IFN-
)-activated macrophages from TNFRp55
/
mice
produced control levels of nitric oxide and killed the parasite efficiently in vitro. Trypanocidal mechanisms of nonphagocytic cells
(myocardial fibroblasts) from both TNFRp55
/
and WT mice
were also activated by IFN-
in a dose-dependent way. However,
IFN-
-activated TNFRp55
/
nonphagocytes showed less
effective killing of T. cruzi than WT control
nonphagocytes, even when interleukin 1
(IL-1
) was added as a
costimulator. In vivo, T. cruzi-infected
TNFRp55
/
mice and WT mice released similar levels of NO
and showed similar levels of IFN-
mRNA and inducible nitric oxide
synthase mRNA in their tissues. Instead, increased susceptibility to
T. cruzi of TNFRp55
/
mice was
associated with reduced levels of parasite-specific immunoglobulin G
(IgG) (but not IgM) antibodies during infection, which is probably
linked to abnormal B-cell differentiation in secondary lymphoid tissues
of the mutant mice. Surprisingly, T. cruzi-infected
TNFRp55
/
mice showed increased inflammatory and
necrotic lesions in several tissues, especially in skeletal muscles,
indicating that TNFRp55 plays an important role in controlling the
inflammatory process. Accordingly, levels of Mn2+
superoxide dismutase mRNA, a TNF-induced enzyme which protects the cell
from the toxic effects of superoxide, were lower in mutant than
in WT infected mice.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is a
multifunctional cytokine effective in in vivo resistance to a
variety of microorganisms. TNF mediates macrophage microbicidal
activity and, at the tissue level, acute and chronic inflammation.
TNF activity is regulated by two homodimeric receptors with
molecular sizes of 55 and 75 kDa (25). These two receptors
are usually coexpressed in most tissues but contain very different
transmembrane and cytoplasmatic domains, thereby involving different
intracellular signal transducers (21, 34) related to
distinct cell functions. Thus, TNF receptor p75 (TNFRp75) has
been implicated in thymocyte proliferation and apoptosis (15,
50), whereas TNFRp55 appears responsible for most of the
biological functions of TNF. Also important, TNFRp55 acts in
synergy with signals elicited by gamma interferon (IFN-
), leading to
the production of NO, a major microbicidal factor (26, 43).
Thus, TNFRp55 mediates resistance to parasites, fungi, and
intracellular bacteria, as shown by the increased susceptibility of
TNFRp55
/
mice to infections with Leishmania
major (56), Listeria monocytogenes (33), Candida albicans (45), and
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (9). Conversely, such
mice are resistant to shock induced by lipopolysaccharide and
galactosamine (33). Moreover,
TNFRp55
/
mice appeared to be protected from
myosin-induced autoimmune myocarditis (31) and
from formation of inflammatory granuloma induced by infection
with Mycobacterium bovis or Corynebacterium parvum (39). Correspondingly, TNFR signaling has
been implicated in the pathogenesis of experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis and human multiple sclerosis, arthritis, diabetes
mellitus, and lupus erythematosus (2).
Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiologic agent of Chagas'
disease, infects 18 to 20 million people in South and Central America
(29). The infection induces cellular and humoral immune
responses which play a vital role in the control of parasite growth in
humans as also shown in experimental T. cruzi
infections. Activation of parasite-specific immune cells results in the
release of cytokines, which are important in regulating the
T. cruzi load. However, morbidity is also mediated
by the immune response, as indicated by the presence of inflammatory
lesions and autoreactive cells and antibodies (48). TNF
alpha (TNF-
) has been shown to be produced during infection with
T. cruzi (5, 6, 36, 37, 49, 59), but
studies on its role have led to contradictory interpretations. Thus,
mice transgenic for soluble TNFR or treated with anti-TNF-
antibodies have shown either increased (38, 43) or reduced
susceptibility to infection (54). Moreover, administration
of recombinant TNF-
exacerbated mortality (3), and
increased levels of endogenous TNF were associated with increased susceptibility (36) and shown to mediate cachexia and
inflammatory damage during infection with T. cruzi
(54). In vitro, TNF was shown to be microbicidal to
T. cruzi by itself (7, 54) or in synergy
with lipopolysaccharide (57) or IFN-
(30, 43) but was also shown to have no effect at all (13).
Here we present the results of studies of infection of
TNFRp55
/
mice with T. cruzi. Whereas control of the infection is defective in such
mice, this is not associated with defective NO release and/or defective
trypanocidal ability of macrophages. However, a less efficient killing
of T. cruzi by IFN-
-activated
TNFRp55
/
nonphagocytic cells and markedly
diminished levels of anti-T. cruzi immunoglobulin G
(IgG) antibodies may explain the increased susceptibility of
mutant mice to infection. Interestingly,
TNFRp55
/
mice also showed more severe inflammatory
lesions concomitantly with decreased levels of transcripts for
Mn2+ superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), a central component in
the protective cellular antioxidant cascade.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Mice and parasites.
TNFRp55
/
mice
were generated by using embryonic stem cell technology (33).
The mutant mice were backcrossed for nine generations with C57Bl/6
mice, and mice of the latter strain were used as wild-type (WT)
controls. Groups of mice were infected intraperitoneally (i.p.) with
104 CA-I or 15 Tulahuén strain trypomastigotes
obtained from peripheral blood of infected mice. The CA-I strain was
isolated from a patient with chronic myocardiopathy and characterized
as having low virulence and being myotropic (14), while the
Tulahuén strain (47) is reticulotropic and virulent.
Parasitemia was measured periodically, and mortality was recorded.
For in vitro experiments, T. cruzi trypomastigotes
(Tulahuén strain) collected from supernatants of L-929 cell
monolayers 7 days after infection were used.
Competitive PCR assay.
The accumulation of inducible nitric
oxide synthase (iNOS), IFN-
, MnSOD, and
-actin mRNA in freshly
extracted organs from infected mice was measured by competitive PCR
assays as previously described (35). Competitor fragments
with a different length but using the same primers as the target DNA
were constructed by using composite primers and an exogenous DNA
fragment as described previously (42). Competitors were
amplified by PCR, purified (Qiagen, Studio City, Calif.), and
quantified in a spectrophotometer. The primer sequences for the
amplification of the cDNA were as follows: sense iNOS, 5' CCC TTC CGA
AGT TTC TGG CAG CAG CAG C 3'; antisense iNOS, 5' GGC TGT CAG AGC CTC
GTG GCT TTG G 3'; sense MnSOD, 5' CCC AGA CCT GCC TTA CGA CT 3';
antisense MnSOD, 5' CGA CCT TGC TCC TTA TTG AA 3'; sense IFN-
, 5'
AAC GCT ACA CAC TGC ATC TTG G 3'; antisense IFN-
, 5' GAC TTC AAA GAG
TCT GAG G 3'; sense
-actin, 5' GTG GGC CGC TCT AGG CAC CAA 3';
antisense
-actin, 5' CTC TTT GAT GTC ACG CAC GAT TTC 3'.
Ten- or threefold serial dilutions of the competitor were amplified in
the presence of a constant amount of cDNA. Reactions were carried out
for 28 to 45 cycles in a thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer Cetus, Norwalk,
Conn.) with an annealing step at 60°C (except 55°C was used for
MnSOD).
Histopathological and immunohistochemical studies.
Various
organs were fixed in 4% neutral buffered formalin and processed for
conventional paraffin embedding. Two samples each of skeletal muscle
(hind leg) and heart, spleen, and liver tissue were randomly selected.
Sections were cut at 4-µm widths, deparaffinized, and stained with
hematoxylin and eosin. A blinded microscopic evaluation of the two sets
of serial sections from each organ was performed on precoded slides.
The grade of inflammatory reaction on hematoxylin-eosin-stained
paraffin sections was scored in 10 microscopic fields (MF) (magnification, ×400) as follows. Fewer than 10 inflammatory cells in
no more than two MF was scored as 0. The occasional presence of
inflammatory cells (<10 cells per high-powered field) in no more than
five MF was scored as 1. The presence of occasional inflammatory cells
in at least six MF, small inflammatory cell clusters (10 to 100 cells)
in no more than two MF, or large inflammatory cell clusters (>100
cells) in one MF was scored as 2. The presence of small inflammatory
cell clusters in at least three MF or large inflammatory cell clusters
in two MF was scored as 3. A score of 4 was assigned when large
inflammatory cell clusters were observed in three or more MF.
Histological analysis was also performed by histocytometry with the aid
of an Integrationsplate eyepiece (Zeiss) with 100 hits. The presence or
absence of parasite nests for every hit was scored.
Immunostaining of skeletal muscle tissue sections was performed with
polyclonal rabbit anti-mouse iNOS (Affinity Bioreagents, Falkenberg,
Sweden) or monoclonal rat anti-mouse CD45 (clone 30F11.1; Pharmingen,
San Diego, Calif.) antibodies or control rabbit or normal rat serum.
Slides were developed by an ABC peroxidase method using
3,3-diaminobenzidine as a chromogen, as previously described (35).
NO measurement.
We assayed NO in vivo by serum nitrate
measurements after reducing nitrate to nitrite with
Aspergillus sp. nitrate reductase (12). NO
released by cultured peritoneal cells was measured by the concentration
of nitrite. Cells were adjusted to 106 per ml in Dulbecco
minimal essential medium (DMEM) without phenol red containing 5% fetal
calf serum and distributed in triplicate in V-shaped 96-well plates. A
0.5 mM concentration of
L-N6-imino-ethyl-lysine
(L-NIL) (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), a relatively specific
inhibitor of iNOS, was added to test wells. Supernatants were sampled
after 24 h for determination of nitrite concentration by the
Griess reaction (8). Nitrite concentration in culture supernatants was determined by using a standard curve with
NaNO2 in DMEM. The nitrate concentration in serum was
determined by using a standard curve with NaNO3 in fetal
calf serum.
In vitro infection of macrophages and fibroblasts.
Fibroblasts were obtained by enzymatic digestion of hearts from
4-week-old TNFRp55
/
or WT mice. In brief, the
hearts were minced in Iscove's modified Dulbecco medium supplemented
with 10% fetal calf serum, penicillin, and streptomycin (IMDM) and
incubated in IMDM containing 1 mg of collagenase per ml at 37°C for
10 min. The supernatant containing released cells was collected, the
washed pellets were further enzymatically digested for two cycles, and
recovered free cells were pooled. The pooled cells were plated and
highly enriched cultures of adherent cardiac, nonmyocyte cells were
recovered during the plating procedure. After the third passage, nearly all cells appeared to be fibroblasts by morphology and by negative immunostaining for muscle-specific
-actin (Sigma). Such cultures were trypsinized, and 1 × 104 to 3 × 104 cells were resuspended in IMDM and seeded on a 24-well
plate, each well containing a 13-mm-diameter coverslide. Activation and infection were performed 48 h after plating as described below.
Peritoneal cavity cells from WT and TNFRp55
/
mice
were suspended in RPMI 1640 medium containing 5% fetal calf serum,
penicillin, and streptomycin and seeded into 24-well tissue culture
plates containing a 13-mm-diameter coverslide in each well. A total of 2 × 105 cells per well was allowed to adhere for
4 h at 37°C in a humidified CO2 incubator and washed
twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) to remove nonadherent cells.
Plated cells (macrophages or myocardial cells) were cultured in the
presence or absence of recombinant murine IFN-
, interleukin 1
(IL-1
), TNF-
, anti-TNF-
(all from Pharmingen), and/or
L-NIL for 24 h at 37°C. The monolayers were then
infected with 106 tissue culture trypomastigote forms of
T. cruzi obtained from the supernatant of L-929
cells. After 4 h for macrophages and 6 h for fibroblasts, the
monolayers were washed four times with PBS. The wells were then
replenished with fresh medium, containing cytokines and/or
L-NIL. Two or three days later, the cultures were washed
three times with PBS, fixed with methanol, and stained with Giemsa. All
conditions were set up in triplicate. The percentage of infected cells
and the number of parasites were determined for at least 200 cells per
culture.
Antibody determinations.
The anti-T.
cruzi antibody contents in the sera from infected mice were
measured in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The plates
were coated overnight with a 200-µg/ml concentration of whole
homogenate from T. cruzi epimastigotes prepared by
pressure-depressure. The plates were blocked with 1% bovine serum
albumin in PBS before the sera were added. The plates were subsequently
developed with alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat anti-mouse
IgG (
chain specific) (Sigma) or anti-mouse IgM (µ chain
specific) (Sigma). The assay was standardized between plates by
including the titration of a serum sample from a mouse chronically
infected with T. cruzi.
Neutralization assay.
A volume containing 106
parasites per ml was incubated with 1 volume of serum (pooled from four
individuals) from TNFRp55
/
or WT mice at 0 or 28 days after infection for 1 h at 37°C. SCID mice (six animals per
group) were subsequently inoculated i.p. with 104 treated
parasites. Parasitemia was determined 16 days after infection.
 |
RESULTS |
TNFRp55
/
mice were infected with the
Tulahuén or CA-I strain of T. cruzi, and the
course of infection in these mice was compared with that in WT mice. WT
mice showed low levels of parasitemia which peaked 3 to 5 weeks after
infection and were controlled thereafter. No such control was observed
in mutant mice (Fig. 1). All mutant mice
died, whereas 80 or 100% of the WT mice survived when infected with
strain Tulahuén or CA-I, respectively (Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
Parasitemia and mortality of
TNFRp55 / and WT mice infected i.p. with 50 Tulahuén (A) or 104 CA-I (B) organisms. The mean
number of organisms per milliliter ± standard error of the mean
for one of two representative experiments with each parasite
strain is depicted. The cumulative mortality at 20 (A) or 35 (B)
days after infection is indicated in parentheses. Differences in
cumulative mortality between WT and TNFRp55 / mice
were significant (P < 0.02, Fisher's exact chi-square
test). *, significantly different from the value for WT infected
controls (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test).
|
|
To determine if the defective control of T. cruzi
could be due to an impaired capacity of TNFRp55
/
macrophages to kill parasites, macrophages from noninfected mutant or
WT mice were incubated with different concentrations of IFN-
before in vitro infection with T. cruzi. When
incubated with low (5 U/ml) doses of IFN-
, macrophages from both
genotypes killed the parasite and released similar levels of NO (Table
1).
Addition of L-NIL, a selective iNOS inhibitor, blocked both
NO release (Table 1) and parasite killing (data not shown). On the
other hand, parasiticidal activity could not be blocked by adding high
levels of neutralizing anti-TNF-
antibodies in either the WT or
mutant strains, suggesting that none of the TNF receptors are
necessary for IFN-
-mediated killing of T. cruzi
(data not shown). On the contrary, NO was released by WT but not by
TNFRp55
/
macrophages when murine TNF-
and IFN-
were used as stimuli in the absence of parasites (Table
2). Upon such stimulation, 20 µg of
anti-TNF-
antibodies per ml blocked accumulation of nitrites in
the supernatant of WT macrophages (data not shown).
Since T. cruzi invades both professional and
nonprofessional phagocytes, we investigated whether a decreased
capacity of nonphagocytic TNFRp55
/
cells to
kill T. cruzi could explain the enhanced
susceptibility of mutant mice. Primary cultures of both WT and
TNFRp55
/
myocardial fibroblasts hampered
T. cruzi growth when activated with IL-1
(a
potent iNOS inducer for nonphagocytes (11, 41) (Table
3). This effect probably occurred in the
absence of parasite killing since reduction of the number of parasites
per cell, but not of the number of infected cells, was observed. In
contrast, IFN-
-activated cells killed T. cruzi
in a dose-dependent fashion (Table 3). Moreover, IFN-
-activated
myocardial cells from TNFRp55
/
mice showed lower
parasite killing than WT mouse cells (Table 3). Coincubation of
TNFRp55
/
or WT mouse myocardial cells with both
IL-1
and IFN-
increased their trypanocidal activity, but
comparatively less in mutant cells, suggesting the involvement of
TNFRp55 in trypanocidal activation of nonphagocytic cells
(Table 4). The IFN-
-activated
trypanocidal mechanism(s) of both TNFRp55
/
and WT
myocardial fibroblasts was mediated by NO, since killing was inhibited
by L-NIL (Table 5).
Since TNF-
plays a role in IFN-
release (1,
40), we measured IFN-
mRNA in tissues from infected WT and
TNFRp55
/
mice. TNFRp55 was not necessary for in
vivo accumulation of IFN-
mRNA, since increased accumulation
of cytokine transcripts was detected in tissues from WT or
TNFRp55
/
mice infected with strain CA-I (Fig.
2) or Tulahuén (data not shown).
Also, no association between NO release and increased susceptibility of
TNFRp55
/
mice was found, since the levels of
nitrite in cell culture supernatants, nitrate in sera, and iNOS mRNA
(Fig. 3) and of protein (data not shown)
in tissues were similar in TNFRp55
/
and WT mice
during infection with T. cruzi.

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FIG. 2.
IFN- mRNA accumulation was determined in skeletal
muscle (A) and spleens (B) from TNFRp55 / and WT
mice at 0 or 30 days after infection with T. cruzi
(CA-I). Total RNA was obtained from spleens or skeletal muscle of
individual mice, and IFN- and -actin mRNA were measured in a
competitive PCR assay. The mean moles of IFN- mRNA per mole of
-actin mRNA (used as a housekeeping gene) from four cDNA samples per
group, of one of two independent experiments, are depicted. *,
significantly different from the value for noninfected WT or mutant
controls (P < 0.001, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test). #,
significantly different from the value for WT infected mice
(P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test).
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FIG. 3.
Nitrate concentration in serum (A), nitrite content in
cell supernatants (B), and iNOS mRNA accumulation in the spleen (C) and
skeletal muscle (D) were determined in TNFRp55 / and
WT mice after infection with T. cruzi. Samples were
obtained 20 and 30 days after infection with strains Tulahuén and
CA-I, respectively. (A) The nitrate level was determined in serum from
five individual mice for each group. The mean
NO3 concentrations are depicted. *,
significantly different from values for uninfected controls
(P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test). (B) To
measure NO release, peritoneal cells from individual mice (six per
group) were cultured for 24 h in the presence or absence of 0.5 mM
L-NIL. NO production was measured 24 h later by the
Griess assay, and mean NO2 concentrations are
depicted. The data of one of two independent experiments are shown.
*, significantly different from value for uninfected mice
(P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test). Differences
between values for WT and TNFRp55 / infected
mice are not significant. (C and D) Total RNA was obtained from spleens
(C) and skeletal muscle (D) of individual mice. iNOS and -actin mRNA
were measured in a competitive PCR assay. The mean moles of iNOS mRNA
per mole of -actin mRNA from four cDNA samples per group, of one of
two independent experiments, are depicted. *, significantly different
from value for uninfected controls (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test).
|
|
Immunoglobulin isotype switch and levels of IgM-specific response did
not differ in TNFRp55
/
and WT infected mice (Fig.
4). However, a decrease in
anti-T. cruzi IgG level was observed between
days 14 and 28 after infection in TNFRp55
/
mice whereas a further increase was observed in WT mice
(Fig. 4). Confirming previous observations (16, 27),
spleens of TNFRp55
/
mice showed no germinal center
formation during infection with T. cruzi, possibly
explaining the low specific IgG response (Fig. 4).

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FIG. 4.
(A and B) Titers of anti-T. cruzi
IgG (A) and IgM (B) in sera from individual mice (six mice per group)
at 17 and 28 days after infection with strain CA-I. The mean numbers of
arbitrary units of specific IgG and IgM per milliliter obtained from
one of two independent experiments are depicted. *, significantly
different from values for WT infected mice (P < 0.05, F-test, analysis of variance). #, significantly different from values
for uninfected WT or TNFRp55 / controls
(P < 0.05, F-test, analysis of variance). (C to F)
Hematoxylin-eosin staining of spleen tissue sections from WT (C and D)
and TNFRp55 / mice (E and F) at 0 (C and E) or 15 (D
and F) days after infection with T. cruzi. It is
important to note the lack of primary follicles (E) and germinal center
formation (F) in tissues from uninfected or infected
TNFRp55 / mice.
|
|
To determine whether the absence of TNFRp55 influenced the cellular
infiltrates associated with acute infection with T. cruzi, the histology of heart, skeletal muscle, and liver
tissue sections from infected mice was analyzed. Skeletal muscles from
TNFRp55
/
mice showed markedly enhanced density of
mononuclear inflammatory infiltrates 30 days after infection with the
myotropic CA-I strain in comparison to that of WT infected controls
(Fig. 5). A higher density of
CD45+ cellular infiltrates and the presence of
calcification and necrosis were observed (Fig. 5; Table
6). However, the increased severity of
lesions in TNFRp55
/
mice was not associated with a
higher number of parasite nests (Table 6). Inflammatory reactions in
heart and liver tissues were more intense in
TNFRp55
/
than WT mice, although the lesions in such
tissues were less severe than those in skeletal muscles (Table 6). No
differences in the severity of tissue lesions between WT and
TNFRp55
/
mice could be detected at an earlier time
point (14 days after CA-I infection).

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FIG. 5.
Hematoxylin-eosin stainings (A to D) and
immunohistochemical study of CD45 expression (E to G) of skeletal
muscles from TNFRp55 / (A, C, D, and G) and WT (B,
E, and F) mice at 0 (A and E) or 30 (B, C, D, F, and G) days after
infection with T. cruzi (strain CA-I). Negative
controls for immunohistochemical stainings done by incubation with
normal rat serum on tissues from T. cruzi-infected
mice showed no peroxidase staining (data not shown). It is important to
note the dramatically increased density of inflammatory infiltrates (C
and G) and the presence of necrosis and calcification (D) in tissues
obtained from infected TNFRp55 / mice.
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|
Cell culture studies have shown that TNF can induce the expression
of the antioxidant MnSOD, thereby protecting tissues against oxidative
insults. We therefore quantified levels of MnSOD mRNA in tissues from
TNFRp55
/
and WT infected mice. T. cruzi infection induced a marked increase in the MnSOD mRNA
levels in the spleen tissue and skeletal muscles of WT mice but
not or only marginally in tissues from
TNFRp55
/
mice (Fig.
6).

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FIG. 6.
MnSOD mRNA accumulation was determined in skeletal
muscle (A) and spleens (B) from individual mice at 0 and 30 days after
infection with T. cruzi (CA-I). MnSOD and -actin
mRNA were measured in a competitive PCR assay. The mean moles of MnSOD
mRNA per mole of -actin mRNA from four cDNA samples per group, of
one of two independent experiments, are depicted. *, significantly
different from value for infected WT mice (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U Wilcoxon test). #, significantly different from value
for uninfected controls (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-U
Wilcoxon test).
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our observations suggest that TNFRp55 signaling is
involved in both control of parasite proliferation and protection
against tissue pathology during infection with T. cruzi. TNFRp55
/
mice showed an
exacerbated susceptibility to infection with virulent and less virulent
strains of T. cruzi. These findings extend and corroborate previous results with mice treated with anti-TNF-
antibodies (43) or mice transgenic for soluble TNFR
(38).
Macrophages play an important role in the control of infection with
T. cruzi, as shown by the increased susceptibility
of mice depleted of such cells (20, 24, 53). However, the
increased susceptibility of TNFRp55
/
mice to
infection was not related to any in vitro demonstrable decreased
ability of IFN-
-activated macrophages to kill T. cruzi and to produce NO. Furthermore, this microbicidal effect
could not be attributed to the action of TNFRp75, since
T. cruzi killing was not blocked by neutralizing
anti-TNF-
antibodies. However, in contrast to normal
macrophages, TNF did not act in synergy with IFN-
for NO
production when T. cruzi was not included in the
coculture with TNFRp55
/
cells, in agreement with
previous observations (9). Thus, parasites provide a second
signal for NO production and killing that may overcome the absence of
signaling via the TNFRp55 and probably that of TNFRp75, since
killing is not abolished by neutralizing anti-TNF-
antibodies.
We also showed that IFN-
and IL-1
(which induces iNOS expression
in nonprofessional phagocytes [11, 41]) activated
trypanocidal activity in both WT and TNFRp55
/
mouse
myocardial cells. However, the trypanocidal activity of TNFRp55
/
myocardial cells was lower than that of WT
cells after IFN-
(but not IL-1
) in vitro activation,
suggesting the involvement of TNFRp55 signaling in IFN-
-mediated
(thugh not in IL-1
-mediated) parasite killing by
nonprofessional phagocytes. Our data also suggest that IL-1
does not
operate downstream of IFN-
-mediated TNFRp55-dependent killing,
since TNFRp55
/
cells also displayed a lower
T. cruzi killing than WT cells after stimulation
with both cytokines. Trypanocidal mechanisms of
TNFRp55
/
and WT nonphagocytic cells were NO
dependent, as previously shown for macrophages (10, 28, 30,
35).
TNF-
induces secretion of IFN-
(40, 51), but we
could not demonstrate decreased IFN-
mRNA accumulation in
infected TNFRp55
/
mice. The increased levels of
IFN-
mRNA detected in the skeletal muscle of infected mutant
mice as compared to that in the WT counterparts is likely due to
the increased inflammatory infiltrates in such tissues. Enhanced levels
of IFN-
transcripts in tissues from infected
TNFRp55
/
mice were paralleled by increased iNOS
expression at the mRNA and protein levels and NO release. Thus,
although displaying a crucial role in resistance against T. cruzi (32, 55), IFN-
and high levels of NO are
not sufficient by themselves to provide protection. Instead,
susceptibility appeared clearly related to diminished levels of
specific IgG, but not IgM, in TNFRp55
/
mice. This
defect in the mature antibody response was related to a lack of
primary follicles and germinal centers in the spleens of
TNFRp55
/
mice during T. cruzi infection, in agreement with other studies (16,
27). This is in line with the protective role of specific IgG,
shown by protection of naive mice against infection with T. cruzi upon passive transfer of IgG antibodies and by the
distinct susceptibility of mice genetically selected for their
low or high production of antibodies (23, 46, 52).
Moreover, the infectivity of T. cruzi
parasites in SCID mice was neutralized by preincubation with sera
from WT but not from TNFRp55
/
infected
mice (data not shown). Thus, increased parasitemia in TNFRp55
/
mice might be due to a defective
antibody-dependent lysis of extracellular parasites.
TNFRp55 has previously been shown to mediate the pathologic effects
of TNF, which include inflammation and tissue damage in autoimmune
and infectious diseases. It was therefore surprising to find
dramatically exacerbated rather than decreased inflammation after
infection of TNFRp55
/
mice with T. cruzi, a feature not related to an increased number of
amastigote nests. This observation contrasts with the reduced inflammatory lesions observed in T. cruzi-infected
in soluble-TNFRp55 transgenic mice (38). The possible
presence of low levels of nonblocked TNF-
in such transgenic
mice (which might also explain the unaltered levels of specific
antibodies in this model) might account for the difference in pathology
between these transgenic mice and infected TNFRp55
/
mice. TNF has been shown to reduce inflammatory reactions in some
autoimmune diseases (22, 60) but, to our knowledge, in no
infectious disease model. TNFRp55 mediates apoptosis of peripheral lymphocytes and might thereby control inflammatory damage
(44). However, we found comparable numbers of apoptotic
cells in inflammatory lesions from TNFRp55
/
and WT
infected mice as measured by the terminal
deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end
labeling staining method (data not shown).
Reactive oxygen species (ROS), implicated as important pathological
mediators in various disorders including inflammation, are released
during T. cruzi infection (4, 36).
TNF has been shown to induce the expression of the mitochondrial
MnSOD (50, 58). SOD triggers the crucial first step of the
antioxidant cascade by catalysis of the dismutation of
superoxide radicals (O2·) to oxygen
(O2) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
Consequently, induction of MnSOD protects cells against
ROS-mediated damage, as well as lethal radiation, and against IL-1- and
TNF-induced cytotoxicity (19). Interestingly,
O2· has been indicated to play a role in
coxsackievirus B3 myocarditis in mice, and SOD has a favorable effect
when administered therapeutically during this infection (17,
18). Our studies demonstrate that infection with T. cruzi induced an increase in MnSOD mRNA accumulation in WT
mice that was markedly impaired in TNFRp55
/
mice.
We speculate that ROS are produced in the absence of TNF signaling.
We could thus explain the observed anti-inflammatory activity mediated
by TNFRp55.
In conclusion, our observations indicate that TNFRp55 controls the
parasite load possibly by its involvement in the maturation of B-cell
compartments in secondary lymphoid organs and thereby the IgG antibody
production and/or inactivation of trypanocidal mechanisms of
nonphagocytes. We suggest that TNFRp55 also plays a protective
role against pathological consequences of infection by induction of
antioxidative mechanisms in TNF targets.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by Sida/SAREC and Cancerfonden,
Stockholm, Sweden, and the Biomedical Concerted Action BMH1-CT94-0947.
The TNFRp55
/
mice were kindly provided by Tak Mak
(Department of Medical Biophysics and Immunology, University of
Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada). We thank Clas Une for his critical comments on the manuscript and Joseph Lawrence (Department of Pathology, Karolinska Hospital) for his technical assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology & Tumorbiology Center, Karolinska Institute, Box 280, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden. Phone: 46-8-728-6232. Fax: 46-8-32-8878. E-mail:
Martin.Rottenberg{at}mtc.ki.se.
Editor: : R. N. Moore
 |
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