Abstract

Keita, M., Vincendeau, P., Buguet, A., Cespuglio, R., Vallat, J.-M., Dumas, M., and Bouteille, B. 2000. Inducible nitric oxide synthase and nitrotyrosine in the central nervous system of mice chronically infected with Trypanosoma brucei brucei. Experimental Parasitology95, 19–27. Human African trypanosomiasis, or sleeping sickness, evolves toward a meningoencephalitic stage, with a breakage in the blood–brain barrier, perivascular infiltrates, and astrocytosis. The involvement of nitric oxide (NO) has been evoked in the pathogenic development of the illness, since NO was found to be increased in the brain of animals infected with Trypanosoma brucei (T. b.) brucei. An excessive NO production can lead to alterations of neuronal signaling and to cell damage through the cytotoxicity of NO and its derivatives, especially peroxynitrites. In African trypanosomiasis, the sites of NO production and its role in the pathogenicity of lesions in the central nervous system (CNS) are unknown. In a chronic model of African trypanosomiasis (mice infected with T. b. brucei surviving with episodic suramin administration), NADPH–diaphorase staining of brain slides revealed that NO synthase (NOS) activity is located not only in endothelial cells, choroid plexus ependymal cells, and neurons as in control mice but also in mononuclear inflammatory cells located in perivascular and parenchyma infiltrates. An immunohistochemical study showed that the mononuclear inflammatory cells expressed an inducible NOS activity. Furthermore, the presence of nitrotyrosine in inflammatory lesions demonstrated an increased NO production and the intermediate formation of peroxynitrites. The detection of extensive formation of nitrotyrosine in the CNS parenchyma was observed in mice having shown neurological disorders, suggesting the role of peroxynitrites in the appearance of neurological troubles. In conclusion, this study confirmed the increased NO synthesis in the CNS of mice infected with T. b. brucei and suggests a deleterious role for NO, through the formation of peroxynitrites, in the pathogenesis of African CNS trypanosomiasis.

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