INVESTIGADORES
LO PRESTI Maria Silvina
artículos
Título:
Involvement of the beta-adrenergic system in the cardiac chronic form of the experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infection.
Autor/es:
LO PRESTI M. SILVINA; RIVAROLA H. WALTER; FERNANDEZ ALICIA R.; ENDERS JULIO E.; LEVIN GLORIA; FRETES RICARDO; CERBAN FM; GARRIDO VV; PAGLINI-OLIVA PA
Revista:
PARASITOLOGY
Editorial:
Cambridge Journals
Referencias:
Año: 2009 vol. 136 p. 905 - 918
ISSN:
0031-1820
Resumen:
Changes in the cardiac beta-adrenergic system in early stages of Trypanosoma cruzi infection have been described. Here, we studied an early (135 days post-infection-p.i.) and a late stage (365 days p.i.) of the cardiac chronic form of the experimental infection (Tulahuen or SGO-Z12 strains), determining plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine levels, beta-receptor density, affinity and function, cardiac cAMP concentration and phosphodiesterase activity, cardiac contractility, and the presence of beta-receptor autoantibodies. Tulahuen-infected mice presented lower epinephrine and norepinephrine levels; lower beta-receptor affinity and density; a diminished norepinephrine response and higher cAMP levels in the early stage, and a basal contractility similar to non-infected controls in the early and augmented in the late stage. The Tulahuen strain induced autoantibodies with weak beta-receptor interaction. SGO-Z12-infected mice presented lower norepinephrine levels and epinephrine levels that diminished with the evolution of the infection; lower beta-receptor affinity and an increased density; unchanged epinephrine and norepinephrine response in the early and a diminished response in the late stage; higher cAMP levels and unchanged basal contractility. The SGO-Z12 isolate induced beta-receptor autoantibodies with strong interaction with the beta-receptors. None of the antibodies, however, acted a as beta-receptor agonist. The present results demonstrate that this system is seriously compromised in the cardiac chronic stage of T. cruzi infection.