Trypanosoma evansi: Ultrastructural Cardiac Muscle and Cardiac Microvasculature Changes in Experimental Murine Infections

Acta Scientiae Veterinariae

Endereço:
AV BENTO GONçALVES 9090
PORTO ALEGRE / RS
Site: http://www.ufrgs.br/actavet/
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ISSN: 16799216
Editor Chefe: [email protected]
Início Publicação: 31/12/1969
Periodicidade: Trimestral
Área de Estudo: Medicina Veterinária

Trypanosoma evansi: Ultrastructural Cardiac Muscle and Cardiac Microvasculature Changes in Experimental Murine Infections

Ano: 2010 | Volume: 38 | Número: 3
Autores: Felix Tejero, Lourdes Lorena Arias-Mota, Antonio Roschman-González, Pedro María Aso, Héctor José Finol
Autor Correspondente: Felix Tejero | [email protected]

Palavras-chave: trypanosoma evansi, cardiac muscle, cardiac microvasculature, murine infections, ultrastructure, pathology

Resumos Cadastrados

Resumo Inglês:

Background: Trypanosoma evansi is the etiologic agent of the equine trypanosomosis, a disease related to the detriment of the
extensive bovine farming in the Venezuelan grasslands. Even though macroscopic pathologies such as anemia, pale mucosa,
icteric tissues, generalized edema, splenomegaly, liver and renal hypertrophy, abortion, anoestrus, emaciation, lymphadenopathies,
striated muscle atrophy as well as epicardiac and endocardiac hemorrhages have been described for infections with the agent, no
reports of any heart ultrastructural change in experimental or natural infections induced by Venezuelan T. evansi isolates are
available. So, a transmission electron microscopic approach to the problem was needed. This work describes cell features of the
cardiac myocyte and the cardiac microvasculature ultrastructure in mice experimentally infected with an equine local isolate of
T. evansi, also providing an account of the infection with the mice’s survival.
Materials, Methods & Results: NMRI Mus musculus were inoculated with a Venezuelan T. evansi isolate derived from a
naturally infected Equus caballus. From day three post-infection, and every other day until the mice’s death, one rodent was
randomly killed, the heart apex was isosmotically removed and cut in symmetrical blocks, which were fixed, post-fixed,
dehydrated, infiltrated, included, sectioned, contrasted and studied by means of transmission electron microscopy, with the
subsequent characterization of the cardiac myocyte and the cardiac microvasculature transformations. The evaluation of the
micrographs demonstrated ultrastructural time-increasing harmful mitochondrial alterations that included reduction in the
number of mitochondria per cell, decrease in mitochondrial dimensions and lessening of the number of cristae per mitochondrion.
Myofibrillar destruction, myofilament loss and atrophy were also evident. In addition, damaging augmentation of the vascular
endothelium thickness, appearance of abnormal endothelial projections and caveolae loss were incontestable changes. The
presence of trypanosomes in the lumen of the heart capillary system was indubitable; however, neither intra-endothelial nor
intra-cardiac myocyte parasites were observed; no inter-tissular parasites were found either.
Discussion: The ultrastructural modifications in the muscular heart tissue and in the heart capillaries of experimentally
infected mice with a Venezuelan isolate of T. evansi, derived from a feral domesticated E. caballus, were incontrovertible being
characterized by the deleterious gradual mitochondrial decline. In such a context, the close relationship between the
mitochondrion and the ribosome disposition is related to protein synthesis being associated to diverse functions and stress
reactions to non-proper substances like T. evansi, such circumstance could lead to cardiac myocyte mitochondrial deterioration.
Additionally, changes in the mitochondrial dimensions and/or the number of cristae/mitochondrion are related to the
mitochondrial enzyme activity. The myofilament loss and the myofibrillar destruction reported in this work could derive from
the capillary damage per se. The overexpression of serum deprivation protein response induces caveolae deformation and
endothelial cell membrane tubulation. The heart’s myodamage could be additionally caused by autoimmunity and/or electrolytic
unbalance induced by the trypanosome. The endothelial cell detriment could be the result of a distant effect of parasitic toxic
catabolites, intense edema, hypoxia and/or ischemia. The atrophy was put in evidence by a growing volume reduction as a
result of myofibril loss probably due to collateral ischemic and hypoxic mechanisms caused by the parasite. Furthermore, the
effect due to toxins could cause intramuscular microvasculature damage, hypoxia and fibrillar atrophy.The trypanosomes
were present in the cardiac capillary circulation, being able, as an inducible result of the liberation of active materials, to
provoke mononuclear and polymorphonuclear infiltration, contributing to the inflammatory response.The subcellular damage
in the cardiac myocites and in the cardiac microvascularure, along with the presence of trypanosomes in the coronary
circulation, and the lack of association between parasites and cardiac myocites or parasites and cardiac endothelial cells, are
attributes with a remarkable pathological meaning since it represents a non described phenomenon of gradual ultrastructural
change that take part of the events, resulting in the murine host death through a degenerative mechanism.