Some components of the cardiac β-adrenergic system are altered in the chronic indeterminate form of experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infection

2008 
Abstract The chronic indeterminate form of Trypanosoma cruzi infection could be the key to knowing which patients will develop chagasic myocardiopathy. Infected mice present a period in which cardiac functional and structural alterations are different from those described for acute or chronic phases. We studied some components of the cardiac β-adrenergic system in mouse hearts infected with T. cruzi Tulahuen strain or SGO-Z12 isolate during the chronic indeterminate phase of infection. We determined: (i) the primary messenger (epinephrine and norepinephrine) levels in plasma by reverse-phase-HPLC; (ii) the cardiac β-adrenergic receptors’ (β-AR) density and affinity by binding with tritiated dihidroalprenolol and by immunofluorescence; (iii) the cardiac concentration of the second messenger (cAMP) (by ELISA) given its importance for the phosphorylation of the proteins involved in cardiac contraction; (iv) the cardiac contractility and functional studies of the β-ARs as a response to the ligand binding to the receptor; and (v) the left ventricular ejection fraction as a measure of in vivo cardiac function. Plasma catecholamines levels remained similar to those found in uninfected controls. The β-ARs’ affinity decreased in both infected groups compared with the uninfected group ( P P P P T. cruzi strains determine, in the chronic indeterminate form, alterations in the signaling pathways of the β-adrenergic system at different levels: (i) between catecholamines and the β 1 -receptors; (ii) between the receptors’ activation and the adenylyl-cyclase activation; and/or (iii) between cAMP and the contractile response.
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