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Toxoplasma gondii & Human Phenotype

Compendium of Known Effects and Ongoing Research

oral infection

Disease tolerance in Toxoplasma infection

January 31, 2020
Melchor, S. J., Ewald, S. E.
Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology 2019, 9
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Toxoplasma gondii is a successful protozoan parasite that cycles between definitive fetid hosts and a broad range of intermediate hosts, including rodents and humans. Within intermediate hosts, this obligate intracellular parasite invades the small intestine, inducing an inflammatory response. Toxoplasma infects infiltrating immune cells, using them to spread systemically and reach tissues amenable to chronic infection. An intact immune system is necessary to control life-long chronic infection. Chronic infection is characterized by formation of parasite cysts, which are necessary for survival through the gastrointestinal tract of the next host. Thus, Toxoplasma must evade sterilizing immunity, but still rely on the host's immune response for survival and transmission. To do this, Toxoplasma exploits a central cost-benefit tradeoff in immunity: the need to escalate inflammation for pathogen clearance vs. the need to limit inflammation-induced bystander damage. What are the consequences of sustained inflammation on host biology? Many studies have focused on aspects of the immune response that directly target Toxoplasma growth and survival, commonly referred to as "resistance mechanisms." However, it is becoming clear that a parallel arm of the immune response has evolved to mitigate damage caused by the parasite directly (for example, egress-induced cell death) or bystander damage due to the inflammatory response (for example, reactive nitrogen species, degranulation). These so-called "disease tolerance" mechanisms promote tissue function and host survival without directly targeting the pathogen. Here we review changes to host metabolism, tissue structure, and immune function that point to disease tolerance mechanisms during Toxoplasma infection. We explore the impact tolerance programs have on the health of the host and parasite biolog

Tagged: chronic infection, gondii tachyzoites, ifn-gamma, immune-response, immunity, inferon gamma, innate, intracellural pathogen, natural-killer-cellsregulatory t- cells, oral infection, Parasite, resistancecachexia, small. intestine, tolerance, Toxoplasma gondii

Uncategorized

Gastrointestinal inflammation and associated immune activation in schizophrenia

October 11, 2012
Severance, E. G., Alaedini, A., Yang, S. J., Halling, M., Gressitt, K. L., Stallings, C. R., Origoni, A. E., Vaughan, C., Khushalani, S., Leweke, F. M., Dickerson, F. B., Yolken, R. H.
Schizophrenia Research 2012; 138: 48-53
Click for abstract
Immune factors are implicated in normal brain development and in brain disorder pathogenesis. Pathogen infection and food antigen penetration across gastrointestinal barriers are means by which environmental factors might affect immune-related neurodevelopment. Here, we test if gastrointestinal inflammation is associated with schizophrenia and therefore, might contribute to bloodstream entry of potentially neurotropic milk and gluten exorphins and/or immune activation by food antigens. IgG antibodies to Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ASCA, a marker of intestinal inflammation), bovine milk casein, wheat-derived gluten, and 6 infectious agents were assayed. Cohort 1 included 193 with non-recent onset schizophrenia, 67 with recent onset schizophrenia and 207 non-psychiatric controls. Cohort 2 included 103 with first episode schizophrenia, 40 of whom were antipsychotic-nave. ASCA markers were significantly elevated and correlated with food antigen antibodies in recent onset and non-recent onset schizophrenia compared to controls (p <= 0.00001-0.004) and in unmedicated individuals with first episode schizophrenia compared to those receiving antipsychotics (p <= 0.05-0.01). Elevated ASCA levels were especially evident in non-recent onset females (p <= 0.009), recent onset males (p <= 0.01) and in antipsychotic-naive males (p <= 0.03). Anti-food antigen antibodies were correlated to antibodies against Toxoplasma gondii, an intestinally-infectious pathogen, particularly in males with recent onset schizophrenia (p <= 0.002). In conclusion, gastrointestinal inflammation is a relevant pathology in schizophrenia, appears to occur in the absence of but may be modified by antipsychotics, and may link food antigen sensitivity and microbial infection as sources of immune activation in mental illness. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Tagged: bipolar disorder, c57bl/6 mice, celiac-disease, common variants, crohns-disease, environment, food hypersensitivity, gluten-free diet, immunology, intestine, mental disorder, microbiology, oral infection, recent-onset, Toxoplasma gondii

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