scholarly journals The Complement System: A Prey of Trypanosoma cruzi

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kárita C. F. Lidani ◽  
Lorena Bavia ◽  
Altair R. Ambrosio ◽  
Iara J. de Messias-Reason
1999 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 653-656 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esterbauer ◽  
Krempler ◽  
Oberkofler ◽  
Patsch

2014 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Sole Chimenti ◽  
Eleonora Ballanti ◽  
Paola Triggianese ◽  
Roberto Perricone

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Galia Ramírez-Toloza ◽  
Lorena Aguilar-Guzmán ◽  
Carolina Valck ◽  
Smrithi S. Menon ◽  
Viviana P. Ferreira ◽  
...  

Chagas’ disease is a zoonotic parasitic ailment now affecting more than 6 million people, mainly in Latin America. Its agent, the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, is primarily transmitted by endemic hematophagous triatomine insects. Transplacental transmission is also important and a main source for the emerging global expansion of this disease. In the host, the parasite undergoes intra (amastigotes) and extracellular infective (trypomastigotes) stages, both eliciting complex immune responses that, in about 70% of the cases, culminate in permanent immunity, concomitant with the asymptomatic presence of the parasite. The remaining 30% of those infected individuals will develop a syndrome, with variable pathological effects on the circulatory, nervous, and digestive systems. Herein, we review an important number of T. cruzi molecules, mainly located on its surface, that have been characterized as immunogenic and protective in various experimental setups. We also discuss a variety of parasite strategies to evade the complement system - mediated immune responses. Within this context, we also discuss the capacity of the T. cruzi infective trypomastigote to translocate the ER-resident chaperone calreticulin to its surface as a key evasive strategy. Herein, it is described that T. cruzi calreticulin inhibits the initial stages of activation of the host complement system, with obvious benefits for the parasite. Finally, we speculate on the possibility to experimentally intervene in the interaction of calreticulin and other T. cruzi molecules that interact with the complement system; thus resulting in significant inhibition of T. cruzi infectivity.


1991 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 355-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Boackle

When complement first contacts salivary secretions, as when gingival crevicular fluid first meets saliva at the gingival margin, complement function is enhanced. The immediate potentiation of the complement system at equal volume ratios of serum to saliva is due to several factors, including the lower ionic strength of saliva when compared with serum and the presence of certain salivary glyproteins such as the nonimmunoglobulin agglutinins that appear to simultaneously activate Cl and affect (sequester) certain complement control proteins, such as Factor H. This initial potentiation of the complement cascade by saliva may aid in defending the area immediately above the gingival crevice from oral microbiota that are being coated with a combination of serous exudate components and salivary components. As serum becomes much more diluted with saliva (i.e., crevicular fluid moves away from the supragingival area), the acidic proline-rich salivary proteins (APRP) begin to disrupt the unbound Clq-Clr2-Cls2 macromolecular complexes. Thus, the APRP along with other C1 fixing substances in saliva appear to restrict complement function, but only when the ratios of saliva to serum exceed 250 :1. Since certain salivary glycoproteins bind to viruses, the potentiation of the complement system by saliva may also play a role in neutralizing certain viral infections on mucosal surfaces where tissue transudates containing complement begin to contact mucosal secretions such as saliva. Again, the ratio of serous fluid to mucosal secretion appears to be an important factor. This article also discusses some of our preliminary data and speculations concerning the binding of the self-associating high-molecular-weight nonimmunoglobulin salivary agglutinins (NIA) with the envelope of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the possible cooperative role of Clq and fibronectin in aiding neutralization of HIV infectivity.


Author(s):  
J Mocco ◽  
Michael E. Sughrue ◽  
Andrew F. Ducruet ◽  
Ricardo J. Komotar ◽  
Sergei A. Sosunov ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 169-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viviana Ferreira ◽  
María Carmen Molina ◽  
Wilhelm Schwaeble ◽  
David Lemus ◽  
Arturo Ferreira

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