Immune complexes in chronic Chagas disease patients are formed by exovesicles from Trypanosoma cruzi carrying the conserved MASP N-terminal region
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Díaz Lozano, Isabel María; Pablos Torró, Luis Miguel de; Longhi, Silvia Andrea; Zago, María Paola; Schijman, Alejandro G.; Osuna Carrillo De Albornoz, AntonioEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2017-03-15Referencia bibliográfica
Díaz Lozano, I. M. et al. Immune complexes in chronic Chagas disease patients are formed by exovesicles from Trypanosoma cruzi carrying the conserved MASP N-terminal region. Sci. Rep. 7, 44451; doi: 10.1038/srep44451 (2017)
Patrocinador
Fundación Ramón Areces, 2014; “Investigación en Ciencias de la Vida y de la Materia”, Project “Exosomas: Nuevos comunicadores intercelulares y su aplicabilidad como agentes terapéuticos en enfermedades parasitarias desatendidas”; Spanish Council of Science and Technology (CICyT); Eranet Lac Hid 0328, the Convocatoria de Incentivos a Proyectos de Excelencia Regional of Andalusian Government JJAA Project Number: P11- CTS-7110/2011Resumen
The exovesicles (EVs) are involved in pathologic host-parasite immune associations and have been
recently used as biomarkers for diagnosis of infectious diseases. The release of EVs by Trypanosoma
cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, has recently been described, with different protein cargoes
including the MASP multigene family of proteins MASPs are specific to this parasite and characterized
by a conserved C-terminal (C-term) region and an N-terminal codifying for a signal peptide (SP). In this
investigation, we identified immature MASP proteins containing the MASP SP in EVs secreted by the
infective forms of the parasite. Those EVs are responsible for the formation of immune complexes (ICs)
containing anti-MASP SP IgGs in patients with different (cardiac, digestive and asymptomatic) chronic
Chagas disease manifestations. Moreover, purified EVs as well as the MASP SP inhibit the action of
the complement system and also show a significant association with the humoral response in patients
with digestive pathologies. These findings reveal a new route for the secretion of MASP proteins in T.
cruzi, which uses EVs as vehicles for immature and misfolded proteins, forming circulating immune
complexes. Such complexes could be used in the prognosis of digestive pathologies of clinical forms of
Chagas disease.