Abstract

Nitric oxide (.NO) is a diffusible messenger implicated in Trypanosoma cruzi resistance. Excess production of .NO and oxidants leads to the generation of nitrogen dioxide (.NO2), a strong nitrating agent. Tyrosine nitration is a post-translational modification resulting from the addition of a nitro (-NO2) group to the ortho-position of tyrosine residues. Detection of protein 3-nitrotyrosine is regarded as a marker of nitro-oxidative stress and is observed in inflammatory processes. The formation and role of nitrating species in the control and myocardiopathy of T. cruzi infection remain to be studied. We investigated the levels of .NO and protein 3-nitrotyrosine in the plasma of C3H and BALB/c mice and pharmacologically modulated their production during the acute phase of T. cruzi infection. We also looked for protein 3-nitrotyrosine in the hearts of infected animals. Our results demonstrated that C3H animals produced higher amounts of .NO than BALB/c mice, but their generation of peroxynitrite was not proportionally enhanced and they had higher parasitemias. While N G-nitro-arginine methyl ester treatment abolished .NO production and drastically augmented the parasitism, mercaptoethylguanidine and guanido-ethyl disulfide, at doses that moderately reduced the .NO and 3-nitrotyrosine levels, paradoxically diminished the parasitemia in both strains. Nitrated proteins were also demonstrated in myocardial cells of infected mice. These data suggest that the control of T. cruzi infection depends not only on the capacity to produce .NO, but also on its metabolic fate, including the generation of nitrating species that may constitute an important element in parasite resistance and collateral myocardial damage.

Highlights

  • Chagas’ disease is a parasitic condition caused by Trypanosoma cruzi that affects 16 to 18 million people in Central and South America and that can lead to impairment of heart function

  • Since in the present study we evaluated the formation of NO and nitrotyrosine as a marker of nitro-oxidative stress during T. cruzi infection, we chose to work with the C3H and BALB/c strains

  • Over the last few years, abundant evidence has been obtained for a role of NO in the host defense against T. cruzi infection as well as in other infectious and inflammatory diseases

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Summary

Introduction

Chagas’ disease is a parasitic condition caused by Trypanosoma cruzi that affects 16 to 18 million people in Central and South America and that can lead to impairment of heart function. In contrast, a recent publication by Cummings and Tarleton [9] showed that iNOS knock-out mice are not more susceptible than wild type to T. cruzi infection

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