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- W35514906 abstract "We have previously shown that a low-stringency single-specific primer–polymerase chain reaction (LSSP- PCR) is a highly sensitive and reproducible technique for the genetic profiling of Trypanosoma cruzi parasites directly in tissues from infected animals and humans. By applying LSSP-PCR to the study of the variable region of kinetoplast minicircle from T. cruzi, the intraspecific polymorphism of the kinetoplast-deoxyribonucleic acid (kDNA) sequence can be translated into individual kDNA signatures. In the present article, we report on our success using the LSSP-PCR technique in profiling the T. cruzi parasites present in the hearts of 13 patients with chagasic cardiopathy and in the esophagi of four patients (three of them with chagasic megaesophagus). In two patients, one with the cardiodigestive clinical form of Chagas disease and the other with cardiopathy and an esophageal inflammatory process, we could study both heart and esophagus and we detected distinct kDNA signatures in the two organs. This provides evidence of a differential tissue distribution of genetically diverse T. cruzi populations in chronic Chagas disease, suggesting that the genetic variability of the parasite is one of the determining factors of the clinical form of the disease. We have previously shown that a low-stringency single-specific primer–polymerase chain reaction (LSSP- PCR) is a highly sensitive and reproducible technique for the genetic profiling of Trypanosoma cruzi parasites directly in tissues from infected animals and humans. By applying LSSP-PCR to the study of the variable region of kinetoplast minicircle from T. cruzi, the intraspecific polymorphism of the kinetoplast-deoxyribonucleic acid (kDNA) sequence can be translated into individual kDNA signatures. In the present article, we report on our success using the LSSP-PCR technique in profiling the T. cruzi parasites present in the hearts of 13 patients with chagasic cardiopathy and in the esophagi of four patients (three of them with chagasic megaesophagus). In two patients, one with the cardiodigestive clinical form of Chagas disease and the other with cardiopathy and an esophageal inflammatory process, we could study both heart and esophagus and we detected distinct kDNA signatures in the two organs. This provides evidence of a differential tissue distribution of genetically diverse T. cruzi populations in chronic Chagas disease, suggesting that the genetic variability of the parasite is one of the determining factors of the clinical form of the disease. Chagas disease, a parasitic infection caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, affects ∼20 million people throughout South and Central America.1Moncayo A Chagas disease. UNDP World Bank WHO Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR). Tropical Disease. Progress in International Research.Geneva, World Health Organization. 1993; 11: 67-75Google Scholar Autochthonous cases are rare in the United States, where nonetheless the disease may represent a health concern because of increasing blood transmission by chronically-infected immigrants.1Moncayo A Chagas disease. UNDP World Bank WHO Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR). Tropical Disease. Progress in International Research.Geneva, World Health Organization. 1993; 11: 67-75Google Scholar Chagas disease has a variable clinical course, ranging from symptomless infection to severe chronic disease with cardiovascular and/or gastrointestinal involvement. The heart pathology is characterized by myocarditis that frequently leads to the development of congestive heart failure and arrhythmia.2Tanowitz HB Chagas disease.Clin Microbiol Rev. 1992; 5: 400-419Crossref PubMed Scopus (307) Google Scholar In the digestive forms of the disease, dilatation and muscular hypertrophy esophagus or colon (megaesophagus and megacolon, respectively) are observed in advanced stages.3Lopes ER Rocha A Meneses AC Lopes MAB Fatureto MC Lopes GP Chapadeiro E Prevalência de megas em necrópsias realizadas no Triângulo Mineiro no período de a 1988.Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 1989; 22: 211-215Crossref PubMed Google Scholar, 4Adad SJ Andrade DCS Lopes ER Contribuição ao estudo da anatomia patológica do megaesôfago chagásico.Rev Inst Med Trop São Paulo. 1991; 33: 443-450Crossref PubMed Google Scholar Pathologically, both the heart and digestive tube exhibit focal lymphocytic infiltrates5Brener Z Immune response and immunopathology in Trypanosoma cruzi infection.in: Brener Z Wendel S Camargo ME Rassi A Chagas Disease (American Trypanosomiasis): Its Impact on Transfusion and Clinical Medicine. ISBT Brazil, São Paolo1992: 31-47Google Scholar along with scarring and loss of myocardial cells in the cardiopathy6Palacius-Pru E Carrasco H Scorza C Espinoza R Ultrastructural characteristics of different stages of human chagasic myocarditis.Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1989; 41: 29-40PubMed Google Scholar and neuronal degeneration with denervation in megaesophagus and megacolon.4Adad SJ Andrade DCS Lopes ER Contribuição ao estudo da anatomia patológica do megaesôfago chagásico.Rev Inst Med Trop São Paulo. 1991; 33: 443-450Crossref PubMed Google Scholar, 7Köeberle F Chagas disease and Chagas syndromes: the pathology of American trypanosomiasis.Adv Parasitol. 1968; 6: 63-116Crossref PubMed Scopus (431) Google Scholar Parasites have rarely been found in tissues examined by routine staining techniques.6Palacius-Pru E Carrasco H Scorza C Espinoza R Ultrastructural characteristics of different stages of human chagasic myocarditis.Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1989; 41: 29-40PubMed Google Scholar, 7Köeberle F Chagas disease and Chagas syndromes: the pathology of American trypanosomiasis.Adv Parasitol. 1968; 6: 63-116Crossref PubMed Scopus (431) Google Scholar However, the use of sensitive molecular techniques such as PCR (polymerase chain reaction) has disclosed the presence of T. cruzi in involved tissues, but not healthy organs, from chronic patients.8Jones EM Colley DJ Tostes S Lopes ER Vnencak-Jones CL McCurley TL Amplification of a Trypanosoma cruzi DNA sequence from inflammatory lesions in human chagasic cardiomyopathy.Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1993; 48: 348-357PubMed Google Scholar, 9Brandariz S Schjman A Vigiliano C Arteman P Viotti R Beldjord C Levin MJ Detection of parasite DNA in Chagas heart disease.Lancet. 1996; 347: 914Google Scholar, 10Vago AR Macedo AM Adad SJ Reis DA Corrêa-Oliveira R PCR detection of Trypanosoma cruzi DNA in esophageal tissues of patients with chronic Chagas disease.Lancet. 1996; 348: 891-892Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (98) Google Scholar It remains unexplained why different patients develop cardiac, digestive, cardiodigestive, or indeterminate clinical forms. An intriguing observation is a peculiar differential geographic distribution of the organ involvement.11Dias JCP Epidemiology of Chagas disease.in: Brener Z Wendel S Camargo ME Rassi A Chagas Disease (American Trypanosomiasis): its Impact on Transfusion and Clinical Medicine. ISBT Brazil, São Paolo1992: 49-80Google Scholar For example, in Chile the digestive form is the most frequent one, whereas in Argentina it only corresponds to 3.5% of the total. Epidemiological studies have shown variable distribution of the clinical forms even in different endemic regions inside Brazil, where overall the relative prevalence of the cardiac and digestive form are 20% to 30% and 8% to 10%, respectively, and the cardiodigestive form being rarely encountered.11Dias JCP Epidemiology of Chagas disease.in: Brener Z Wendel S Camargo ME Rassi A Chagas Disease (American Trypanosomiasis): its Impact on Transfusion and Clinical Medicine. ISBT Brazil, São Paolo1992: 49-80Google Scholar This geographical heterogeneity suggests that genetic variation of the host, the parasite, or both, is important in establishing the clinical type of the disease. We have concentrated our efforts in studying the possible effect of parasite genetic factors. For that, we have developed a sensitive DNA profiling technique called low-stringency single-specific primer–polymerase chain reaction (LSSP-PCR) that allowed us to achieve the genetic characterization of T. cruzi by the direct study of infected tissues.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar The method was based on PCR amplification of the variable region of the kinetoplast-deoxyribonucleic acid (kDNA) from T. cruzi, afterward translating it by LSSP-PCR into a specific and highly reproducible “kDNA signature.”12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar The rationale of this approach was that genetic profiling of kDNA could be used to infer variation in nuclear genes that probably are the most relevant for tissue infectivity, because T. cruzi exhibits extreme levels of linkage disequilibrium between different genomic compartments,13Zhang Q Tibayrenc M Ayala FJ Linkage disequilibrium in natural populations of Trypanosoma cruzi (Flagellate), the agent of Chagas' disease.J Parasitol. 1988; 35: 81-85Google Scholar including between kDNA and nuclear genome.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar, 14Tibayrenc M Ayala FJ Forte corrélation entre classification isoenzymatique et variabilité de l'ADN kinétoplastique chez Trypanosoma cruzi.C R Acad Sci Paris. 1987; 304: 89-92PubMed Google Scholar Our previous study demonstrated that kDNA signatures could be easily obtained by the direct analysis of tissues from experimentally-infected animals and also from one single chronic chagasic human patient.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar In the present article, we wish to report our success in profiling with the LSSP-PCR technique the parasites present in the hearts of 13 patients with chagasic cardiopathy and in the esophagi of four patients (three of them with chagasic megaesophagus and the other without megaesophagus but presenting an inflammatory process in this organ). In two patients, one with the cardiodigestive clinical form of Chagas disease and the other with cardiopathy and an esophageal inflammatory process, we could study both heart and esophagus and detected distinct kDNA signatures in the two organs. This provides evidence of a differential tissue distribution of genetically diverse T. cruzi populations in chronic Chagas disease and suggests that the genetic variability of the parasite is one of the determining factors of the clinical form of Chagas disease. We analyzed heart tissue fragments (left ventricle) obtained from thirteen patients with chronic chagasic cardiopathy (Table 1). Six of these tissue samples (A29, A30, A33, A36, A37, and A38) originated from chagasic patients living in the endemic area of Uberaba, MG, Brazil and were obtained during autopsies at the Faculdade de Medicina do Triângulo Mineiro in Uberaba. Four samples (A1, A10, A11, and A48) were also obtained at autopsy of chagasic patients followed at the Cardiological Center of the Hospital Felício Rocho, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil. The other three heart samples (A49, A50, and A51) were obtained from hearts removed from patients during cardiac transplants also performed at the Surgical Center of the Hospital Felício Rocho, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil. In all cases informed consent was obtained from the patients or their families.Table 1Chagasic Tissue Samples Studied and Clinical Characteristics of PatientsTissuePatientAgeSexOriginMajor clinical manifestations and pathological findingsHeart and esophagusA29/E461MAraxá, MGCCC, presenting heart enlargement with discreet CHF. Absence of megaesophagus; but presence of moderate myositis in the esophagusHeart and esophagusA36/E1257MUberaba, MGCCC with megaesophagus grade IVHeartA3066MUberaba, MGSudden death. Asymptomatic patient with mild myocarditis. Absence of megasyndromes.HeartA3347FUberaba, MGCCC with arrhythmia and CHFHeartA3770MBambui, MGCCC and absence of megasyndromesHeartA3842MUberaba, MGCCC with arrhythmia and discreet CHF. Absence of megasyndromesHeartA132FBerilo, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesHeartA1030MTrês Marias, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesHeartA1141FMontes Claros, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesHeartA4836MCapelinha, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesHeartA4939MCapelinha, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesHeartA5026MBrumadinho, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesHeartA5133MSanto Antônio de Pirapitinga, MGCCC with severe CHF (grade IV*Classification according to the New York Heart Association.). Absence of megasyndromesEsophagusE851MAraxá, MGMegaesophagus grade IIIEsophagusE1143FIturama, MGMegaesophagus grade IVCCC, chronic chagasic cardiopathy; CHF, congestive heart failure; A, heart tissue; E, esophagus tissue.* Classification according to the New York Heart Association. Open table in a new tab CCC, chronic chagasic cardiopathy; CHF, congestive heart failure; A, heart tissue; E, esophagus tissue. Two independent Ethical Committees approved this study. It fulfilled all the criteria required by the Medical Code of Ethics and the Helsinki II statement, required by both Committees. The analysis of human tissue samples, obtained by autopsy or surgery procedures, of the patients from an endemic area for Chagas disease near Uberaba, Minas Gerais, Brazil, was approved by the Ethical Committee of the Faculdade de Medicina do Triângulo Mineiro. The Ethical Committee of the Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade Federal De Minas Gerais also approved the work with the human samples obtained by autopsy or cardiac transplants of the patients from the Hospital Felício Rocho, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Esophageal samples (E4, E12) were also taken from the two patients with cardiopathy described above (A29, A36), one of whom suffered from megaesophagus (A36/E12) whereas the other, although having no esophageal dilatation, displayed prominent inflammatory infiltration (A29/E4). In addition, tissue fragments were taken from the surgically resected esophagi of two chronic chagasic patients with megaesophagus (E8 and E11; Table 1). Informed consent was obtained from the patients or their families. Tissue fragments were processed for both PCR and histological analysis. Immediately after autopsy, surgery samples of ∼2 × 5 × 5 mm were frozen in liquid nitrogen and maintained at −80°C until DNA extraction for PCR, which was performed by the alkaline lysis protocol as previously described.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar For histological studies, samples were fixed in 4% phosphate-buffered formaldehyde and routinely processed for paraffin embedding and hematoxylin and eosin stain. Parasite detection in each tissue sample was performed using specific PCR amplification of a 330-bp fragment corresponding to the four variable regions of the T. cruzi kDNA minicircle. PCR was carried out in a final volume of 25 μl containing 10 mmol/L Tris-HCl, pH 8.5; 105 mmol/L KCl; 2.0 mmol/L MgSO4; 200 μmol of each 2′deoxynucleotide 5′-triphosphate; 38 pmol of each primer (S35: 5′-AAATAATGTACGGGGAGATGCATGA-3′ and S36: 5′-GGGTTCGATTGGGGTTGGTGT-3′). and 1.5 units of Taq DNA polymerase (a gift of Cenbiot, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil). The DNA template consisted of 3 μl of the product of the alkaline lysis diluted 10 times in double-distilled water. Thirty amplification cycles were carried out with annealing at 60°C for 1 minute, extension at 72°C for 2 minutes, and denaturation at 94°C for 1 minute, preceded by an initial denaturation at 94°C for 5 minutes. PCR products were visualized in 6% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver-stained as described elsewhere.15Santos FR Pena SDJ Epplen JT Genetic and population study of a Y-linked tetranucleotide repeat DNA polymorphism with a simple non-isotopic technique.Hum Genet. 1993; 90: 655-656Crossref PubMed Scopus (259) Google Scholar The production of kDNA signatures by LSSP-PCR is a two-step procedure. The first step consisted of the specific PCR amplification of the kDNA of T. cruzi as described above. The PCR products were loaded in a 1.5%-agarose gel (1/3 low-melting point agarose. Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) stained by ethidium bromide, the 330-bp DNA fragments being visualized by long-wave ultraviolet radiation, and removed from the gel. These fragments were then melted, diluted ten-fold in double-distilled water and used as templates for a second step of amplification using low stringency conditions (the LSSP-PCR reaction), which was performed exactly as described, using primer S35 as driver.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar The LSSP-PCR products were visualized by electrophoresis in 6% polyacrylamide gel and silver-stained.15Santos FR Pena SDJ Epplen JT Genetic and population study of a Y-linked tetranucleotide repeat DNA polymorphism with a simple non-isotopic technique.Hum Genet. 1993; 90: 655-656Crossref PubMed Scopus (259) Google Scholar The first step of our study was to genetically profile the parasites present in heart samples obtained from 13 chronic patients with chagasic cardiopathy (Table 1). In each patient we obtained a different kDNA signature (Figure 1, lanes 2–14). However, some LSSP-PCR profiles had noticeable similarities as seen in Figure 1 (eg, A1 and A11, lanes 8 and 10; and A30 and A37, lanes 3 and 6). The histological analysis of the heart samples showed, as expected, the presence of a predominantly mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate and fibrosis (data not shown). We also analyzed the T. cruzi parasites present in esophageal tissues from four chagasic patients. Although LSSP-PCR was also able to genetically distinguish the parasites in each patient (Figure 2A, lanes 1–8), two of them, E8 and E11, showed quite similar kDNA signatures (Figure 2A, lanes 3 and 4). The esophageal samples of the patients with advanced megaesophagus (E8, E11, and E12) exhibited moderate (E8) to intense (E11 and E12. inflammatory processes in the muscle layer and around or inside the esophageal ganglia (data not shown). Patient E4, although without megaesophagus, had moderate and focal inflammatory exudation in the muscular layer, mainly near the myenteric plexus (data not shown). Two of the 15 patients in our study had both cardiac and esophageal involvement and we were able to study both organs (A36/E12 and A29/E4). The remarkable finding was that in both patients the kDNA signatures obtained from the distinct tissues (heart and esophagus) of the same patient were different (Figure 2B, lanes 2–8). Independent LSSP-PCR reproducibility experiments were done with two different tissue fragments of the pathological hearts (A36, A29) and esophagus (E12; unfortunately we did not have enough material to allow a second experiment of E4). As can be seen in Figure 2B (A36, lanes 2 and 3. E12, lanes 4 and 5; A29, lanes 6 and 7) there is excellent reproducibility of the LSSP-PCR kDNA signatures in replicate samples of the same diseased organ in the same patient. Chagas disease is a parasitic infection characterized by an evident clinical pleomorphism that many authors, including Carlos Chagas himself,16Chagas C Nova entidade morbida do homem. Resumo geral de estudos etiológicos e clínicos.Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 1911; 3: 219-275Google Scholar attributed to differential tissue tropism by diverse strains of T. cruzi. Most, if not all, studies dedicated to the demonstration of specific histotropism of T. cruzi have used only microscopy for determining the distribution of parasites and inflammatory processes in experimental animals, mainly during the acute phase of the infection.17Tagliaferro WH Pizzi T Connective tissue reactions in normal and immunized mice to a reticulotropic strain of Trypanosoma cruzi.J Infect Dis. 1955; 96: 199-226Crossref PubMed Scopus (87) Google Scholar, 18Bice DE Zeledon R Comparison of infectivity of strains of Trypanosoma cruzi (Chagas).J Parasitol. 1909; 56 (1970): 663-670Crossref Scopus (51) Google Scholar, 19Melo RC Brener C Tissue tropism of different Trypanosoma cruzi strains.J Parasitol. 1978; 64: 475-482Crossref PubMed Scopus (190) Google Scholar, 20Schempler BR Ávila CM Coura JR Brener Z Course of infection and histopathological lesions in mice infected with seventeen Trypanosoma cruzi strains isolated from chronic patients.Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 1983; 16: 23-30Crossref Google Scholar Our study represents the first direct evidence of differential tissue distribution of diverse T. cruzi populations in chronic human Chagas disease. We had previously shown that kDNA signatures obtained from animals experimentally infected with different T. cruzi clones were highly reproducible and identical to those produced from the originating cultures.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar Moreover, we showed that the degree of similarity displayed by the different kDNA signatures of two strains reflected, at least in part, the genetic distance (as established by DNA fingerprinting with multilocal probes) between the strains.12Vago AR Macedo AM Oliveira RP Andrade LO Chiari E Galvão LMC Simpson AJG Tostes S Pena SDJ Kinetoplast DNA signatures of Trypanosoma cruzi strains obtained directly from infected tissues.Am J Pathol. 1996; 149: 2153-2159PubMed Google Scholar This was a key finding that highlighted the existence of strong linkage disequilibrium between genetic markers in the kDNA and in the nuclear genome as a consequence of the clonal structure and absence of sexual reproduction in T. cruzi.21Tibayrenc M Ward P Moya A Ayala FJ Natural populations of Trypanosoma cruzi, the agent of Chagas disease, have a complex multiclonal structure.Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1986; 83: 115-119Crossref PubMed Scopus (337) Google Scholar, 22Oliveira RP Broude NE Macedo AM Cantor CR Smith CL Pena SDJ Probing the genetic population structure of Trypanosoma cruzi with polymorphic microsatellites.Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1998; 95: 3776-3780Crossref PubMed Scopus (151) Google Scholar Tibayrenc and Ayala14Tibayrenc M Ayala FJ Forte corrélation entre classification isoenzymatique et variabilité de l'ADN kinétoplastique chez Trypanosoma cruzi.C R Acad Sci Paris. 1987; 304: 89-92PubMed Google Scholar had already demonstrated the existence of strong linkage disequilibrium between isoenzyme loci and kDNA restriction fragment length polymorphisms. In this fashion, genetic variation in kDNA sequence profiled by LSSP-PCR is correlated with nuclear polymorphisms, establishing the theoretical rationale for the present study. More recently we have demonstrated in animals infected with two different T. cruzi clones that the LSSP-PCR patterns of double-infected organs represent the sum of the kDNA signatures of each separate clone.23Andrade LO Machado CRS Chiari E Pena SDJ Macedo AM Genetic variability of Trypanosoma cruzi: differential tissue distribution of diverse clones of Trypanosoma cruzi in infected mice.Mol Biochem Parasitol. 1999; 100: 163-172Crossref PubMed Scopus (136) Google Scholar Thus, we can expect that the correlation of kDNA signature similarity with genetic similarity applies not only to clones or monoclonal strains, but also to polyclonal strains, which seem to be the majority in nature.22Oliveira RP Broude NE Macedo AM Cantor CR Smith CL Pena SDJ Probing the genetic population structure of Trypanosoma cruzi with polymorphic microsatellites.Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1998; 95: 3776-3780Crossref PubMed Scopus (151) Google Scholar, 24Tibayrenc M Ayala FJ Towards a population genetics of microorganisms: the clonal theory of parasitic protozoa.Parasitol Today. 1991; 7: 228-232Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (141) Google Scholar, 25Deane MP Sousa MA Pereira NP Gonçalves AM Momen H Morel C Trypanosoma cruzi: inoculation schedules and re-isolation methods selected individual strains from doubly infected mice, as demonstrated by schizodeme and zymodeme analyses.J Protozool. 1984; 31: 276-280Crossref PubMed Scopus (56) Google Scholar, 26Carneiro M Chiari E Gonçalves AM Pereira AAS Morel C Romanha AJ Changes in the isoenzyme and kinetoplast DNA patterns of Trypanosoma cruzi strains induced by maintenance in mice.Acta Tropica. 1990; 47: 35-45Crossref PubMed Scopus (43) Google Scholar Our results with 13 heart and four esophagus samples clearly show a different kDNA signature in each case. This reflects our previous observation of great genetic variability in T. cruzi (reviewed by Macedo and Pena27Macedo AM Pena SDJ Genetic variability of Trypanosoma cruzi: implications for the pathogenesis of Chagas disease.Parasitol Today. 1998; 14: 119-123Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (195) Google Scholar). This variability originates not only from enormous clonal diversity, but also the fact that most infecting strains probably represent different combinations of genetically different clones. However, similarities of kDNA profiles were still observed between different patients coming from the same geographic region (see Figure 2A, E8 and E11, lanes 3 and 4). This suggests that genetically-related populations of T. cruzi, possibly existing in the same or adjoining geographical areas, might be involved in determining the development of the same clinical form of the disease. Our most significant finding, however, was the observation that in two instances the kDNA signatures obtained from the heart and esophagus of the same patient differed significantly in the two organs. As demonstrated in Figure 2B, the reproducibility of the kDNA profiles was excellent. Our recent microsatellite studies have clearly demonstrated that T. cruzi populations are frequently multiclonal.22Oliveira RP Broude NE Macedo AM Cantor CR Smith CL Pena SDJ Probing the genetic population structure of Trypanosoma cruzi with polymorphic microsatellites.Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1998; 95: 3776-3780Crossref PubMed Scopus (151) Google Scholar, 28Oliveira RP Melo AIR Macedo AM Chiari E Pena SDJ The population structure of Trypanosoma cruzi: expanded analysis of 54 strains using eight polymorphic CA-repeat microsatellites.Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 1999; 94: 65-70Crossref PubMed Scopus (26) Google Scholar Presumably, each of these two patients was infected with a multiclonal strain, one or more clone(s. successfully chronically infecting the heart and the other(s) lodging in the esophagus. We only had these two cases for study because postmortem examinations are not common medical practice in Brazil, and it is difficult to obtain heart and esophagus tissue from the same patient with the cardiodigestive form of Chagas disease (the least common of the chronic forms of the disease). Thus, with the caveat of being based on the study of only two patients, this represents the first direct evidence of probable human differential tissue tropism of T. cruzi clones and provides support to the “clonal-histotropic” model of Chagas disease pathogenesis proposed by us.27Macedo AM Pena SDJ Genetic variability of Trypanosoma cruzi: implications for the pathogenesis of Chagas disease.Parasitol Today. 1998; 14: 119-123Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (195) Google Scholar We have recently obtained strong experimental support for this model, studying BALB/c mice during the acute or chronic phase of infection with two genetically different clonal populations.23Andrade LO Machado CRS Chiari E Pena SDJ Macedo AM Genetic variability of Trypanosoma cruzi: differential tissue distribution of diverse clones of Trypanosoma cruzi in infected mice.Mol Biochem Parasitol. 1999; 100: 163-172Crossref PubMed Scopus (136) Google Scholar Double-infected animals showed clear differential tissue tropism for the two T. cruzi populations during the chronic phase. The extent of the pathological changes observed in the histological analysis of the infected organs of the mice was also dependent on the T. cruzi population present in each organ.23Andrade LO Machado CRS Chiari E Pena SDJ Macedo AM Genetic variability of Trypanosoma cruzi: differential tissue distribution of diverse clones of Trypanosoma cruzi in infected mice.Mol Biochem Parasitol. 1999; 100: 163-172Crossref PubMed Scopus (136) Google Scholar In conclusion, we have provided in the present work evidence that the genetic polymorphism of infecting T. cruzi populations might exert an influence on the pathogenesis of chronic Chagas disease. The kDNA signatures obtained by LSSP-PCR from chronic chagasic patients thus constitute an important new clinical tool to study the molecular epidemiology of Chagas disease." @default.
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- W35514906 title "Genetic Characterization of Trypanosoma cruzi Directly from Tissues of Patients with Chronic Chagas Disease" @default.
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