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Toxoplasma gondii & Human Phenotype

Compendium of Known Effects and Ongoing Research

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Toxoplasmosis as a cause for behaviour disorders – overview of evidence and mechanisms

October 19, 2010
Fekadu A, Shibre T, Cleare AJ.
Folia Parasitologica 2010; 57: 105-113
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Background - There is growing interest in the role of microbial agents in the causation of psychiatric disorders. The neurotropic protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii is one of the main candidates and has been associated with various psychiatric conditions, including schizophrenia. Methods - A narrative review of the literature from the main medical databases (Medline, PubMed, PsycINFO), Google Scholar and Google using combinations of applicable terms. Results - T. gondii affects the brain in both the acute and the latent stages of infection causing apparent brain pathologies in infected rodents and both immuno-compromised and immuno-competent humans. In immuno-competent individuals, behavioural disorders are primarily related to the latent stages of the illness. Behavioural/mental disorders that include schizophrenia, mood disorders, personality changes and cognitive impairments may be related to infection with T gondii. Evidence for a behavioural effect of T gondii comes from observational reports in animal models and controlled behavioural analysis in humans. Indirect clues of infection also come from raised seroprevalence or serotitres of antitoxoplasma antibodies among those with mental disorders. The pathophysiologic mechanism through which T gondii may exert its effect is not clear, but direct impact on the brain and changes in neuroimmunomodulation, neurotransmission and some gene-environment interactions are postulated. Conclusion - There is evidence supporting a potential role of T gondii infection in the onset of some behavioural disorders. Confirmation of such a role would prove a significant breakthrough in the search for the aetiology, treatment and prevention of behavioural disorders, such as schizophrenia. However, the associations remain preliminary.

Tagged: 1st-episode schizophrenia, agents, antibodies, behavioural disorder, decreased level, gondii infection, individuals, mental-health surveys, mood, mood disorders, novelty seeking, personality changes, review, risk, Schizophrenia, Toxoplasma gondii, toxoplasmosis

Mental healthReviews

Autism spectrum disorders may be due to cerebral toxoplasmosis associated with chronic neuroinflammation causing persistent hypercytokinemia that resulted in an increased lipid peroxidation, oxidative stress, and depressed metabolism of endogenous and exogenous substances

October 19, 2010
Prandota J.
Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders 2010; 4: 119-155
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Worldwide, approximately 2 billion people are chronically infected with Toxoplasma gondii with largely yet unknown consequences. Patients with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) similarly as mice with chronic toxoplasmosis have persistent neuroinflammation, hypercytokinemia with hypermetabolism associated with enhanced lipid peroxidation, and extreme changes in the weight resulting in obesity or wasting. Data presented in this review suggest that environmental triggering factors such as pregnancy, viral/bacterial infections, vaccinations, medications, and other substances caused reactivation of latent cerebral toxoplasmosis because of changes in intensity of latent central nervous system T. gondii infection/inflammation and finally resulted in development of ASD. Examples of such environmental factors together with their respective biomarker abnormalities are: pregnancy (increased NO, IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, IL-6, IL-10, prolactin: decreased IFN-gamma, IL-12), neuroborreliosis (increased IL-1 beta, sIL-1R2, TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, IL-18, transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1)), vital infections (increased IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma/alpha/beta,TGF-beta 1), thimerosal (increased IL-5, IL-13; decreased IFN-gamma,TNF-alpha,IL-6, IL-12p70, NOS), and valproic acid (increased NO, reactive oxygen species; decreased TNF-alpha, IL-6, IFN-gamma). The imbalances in pro- and antiinflammatory processes could markedly hinder [lost defense mechanisms important for immune control of the parasite, such as the production of NO, cytokines, and reactive oxygen/nitrogen species, tryptophan degradation by indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase and/or tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase, limitation of the availability of intracellular iron to T gondii, and the mechanisms mediated by an IFN-gamma responsive gene family. These fluctuations could result in a recurrent profuse multiplication of T. gondii in the brain associated with persistent neuroinflammation, chronic overproduction of pro- and antiinflammatory cytokines, and NO causing increased oxidative stress, and significantly depressed activity of several enzymes including cytochrome P450 monooxygenase family responsible for metabolism of physiological substrates and xenobiotics, such as steroids, fatty acids, prostaglandins, drugs, pollutants, and carcinogens, finally leading to development of ASD. This reasoning may be supported by such abnormal metabolic events as: (1) patients with ASD have significantly decreased melatonin levels caused by marked deficit in acetylserotonin methyltransferase activity, possibly resulting from maternal and/or fetal/postnatal overproduction of NO, characteristic for this clinical entity; (2) thimerosal inhibited both insulin-like growth factor-1- and dopamine-stimulated methylation reactions, and depressed methionine synthase activity, the metabolic events important for promoting normal neurodevelopment; (3) valproic acid, a strong histone deacetylase inhibitor, have potent anti-T. gondii activity. Thus, patients with ASD should be tested for T. gondii infection. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

Tagged: abnormalities, abnormality, acid, acids, aktivity, autism, autistic spectrum disorders, availability, beta, biomarker, brain, cell-mediated-immunity, central-nervous-system, cerebral, Cerebral toxoplasmosis, change, changes, chronic, chronic neuroinflammation, chronic toxoplasmosis, clinical, congenital cytomegalovirus-infection, consequence, consequences, control, could, cytochrome, cytochrome p450, cytokine, cytokines, data, defense, defense-mechanisms, deficit, degradation, depressed enzyme activities, development, disorder, disorders, drug, drugs, environmental, environmental factors, enzyme, enzymes, event, events, example, families, family, fluctuation, fluctuations, gene, gene families, gene family, gondii, gondii infection, growth, growth-factor-beta, hepatic drug-metabolism, herpes-simplex-virus, histone, histone deacetylase, hypercytokinemia, hypermetabolic state, il-1, il-10, il-12, il-13, il-6, immune, immune irregularities, important, infection, infections, inhibitor, insulin-like, intensity, interferon-inducing agents, intracellular, iron, latent, level, limitation, lipid, lipid-peroxidation, maternal, mechanism, mechanisms, medication, melatonin, metabolism, methionine, methylation, methyltransferase, methyltransferase aktivity, mice, multiplication, nervous, nervous system, neurodevelopment, nf-kappa-b, nitric oxide, nitric-oxide synthase, obesity, or, overproduction, oxidative stress, oxygen, p-450-dependent monooxygenase systems, Parasite, patient, patients, people, persistent, pregnancies, pregnancy, proces, prolactin, prostaglandins, reaction, reactivation, review, species, spectrum, spectrum disorders, spektra, steroids, stress, substrate, systém, t, tgf-beta, tnf-alpha, Toxoplasma, Toxoplasma gondii, toxoplasmosis, tryptophan, tumor-necrosis-factor, vaccination, vital, weight, xenobiotics

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