IDICER   25199
INSTITUTO DE INMUNOLOGIA CLINICA Y EXPERIMENTAL DE ROSARIO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
T. cruzi experimental infection impacts on the thymic regulatory T cell compartment
Autor/es:
NÔ SEARA CORDEIRO, SYNARA; D'ATTILIO, LUCIANO; CALMON-HAMATY, FLAVIA; COTTA-DE-ALMEIDA, VINÍCIUS; SPINELLI, SILVANA VIRGINIA; SAVINO, WILSON; PÉREZ, ANA ROSA; GONZÁLEZ, FLORENCIA BELÉN; FERNÁNDEZ BUSSY, RODRIGO; BOTTASSO, OSCAR; VILLAR, SILVINA RAQUEL
Revista:
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Editorial:
Public Library of Science
Referencias:
Lugar: San Francisco; Año: 2016 vol. 10
ISSN:
1935-2727
Resumen:
The dynamics of regulatory T cells in the course of Trypanosoma cruzi infection is still debated. We previously demonstrated that acute murine T. cruzi infection results in an impaired peripheral CD4+Foxp3+ T cell differentiation due to the acquisition of an abnormal Th1-like phenotype and altered functional features, negatively impacting on the course of infection. Moreover, T. cruzi infection induces an intense thymic atrophy. As known, the thymus is the primary lymphoid organ in which thymic-derived regulatory T cells, known as tTregs, differentiate. Considering the lack of available data about the effect of T. cruzi infection upon tTregs, we examined tTreg dynamics during the course of disease. We confirmed that T. cruzi infection induces a marked loss of tTreg cell number associated to cell precursor exhaustion, partially avoided by glucocorticoid ablation- and IL-2 survival factor depletion. At the same time, tTregs accumulate within the CD4 single-positive compartment, exhibiting an increased Ki-67/Annexin V ratio compared to controls. Moreover, tTregs enhance after the infection the expression of signature markers (CD25, CD62L and GITR) and they also display alterations in the expression of migration-associated molecules (alpha chains of VLAs and chemokine receptors) such as functional fibronectin-driven migratory disturbance. Taken together, we provide the first data demonstrating profound alterations in tTreg compartment during acute murine T. cruzi infection, denoting that their homeostasis is significantly affected. The evident loss of tTreg cell number may compromise the composition of tTreg peripheral pool, and such sustained alteration over time may be partially related to the immune dysregulation observed in the chronic phase of the disease.