BSP Spring Meeting York 2022
Schedule : Back to Martin Taylor

Incomplete Recruitment of Protective T Cells Is Associated with Trypanosoma cruzi Persistence in the Mouse Colon

Wed23 Mar10:20am(10 mins)
Where:
T/005
Speaker:
Martin Taylor

Authors

MC Taylor2; MD Lewis1; A Ward1; JM Kelly11 London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK;  2 London School of Hygiene and tropical Medicine (LSHTM), UK

Discussion

Trypanosoma cruzi is the etiological agent of Chagas disease. Following T cell-mediated suppression of acute-phase infection, this intracellular eukaryotic pathogen persists long-term in a limited subset of tissues at extremely low levels. The reasons for this tissue-specific chronicity are not understood. Using a dual bioluminescent-fluorescent reporter strain and highly sensitive tissue imaging that allows experimental infections to be monitored at single-cell resolution, we undertook a systematic analysis of the immunological microenvironments of rare parasitized cells in the mouse colon, a key site of persistence. We demonstrate that incomplete recruitment of T cells to a subset of colonic infection foci permits the occurrence of repeated cycles of intracellular parasite replication and differentiation to motile trypomastigotes at a frequency sufficient to perpetuate chronic infections. The lifelong persistence of parasites in this tissue site continues despite the presence, at a systemic level, of a highly effective T cell response. Overcoming this low-level dynamic host-parasite equilibrium represents a major challenge for vaccine development.

Hosted By

British Society for Parasitology (BSP)

We are science based Charitable Incorporated Organisation

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