• Title of article

    Chagas Disease and the Autoimmunity Hypothesis

  • Author/Authors

    Kierszenbaum، Felipe نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    -20
  • From page
    21
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    The notion that the pathology of Chagasʹ disease has an autoimmune component was initially based on the finding of circulating antibodies binding heart tissue antigens in patients and mice chronically infected with Trypanosoma cruzi. Later, T lymphocytes reactive with heart or nerve tissue antigens were found in chagasic mice and patients, extending the concept to include cellmediated immunity. However, there is disagreement about whether the observed immunologic autoreactivities are triggered by T. cruzi epitopes and then affect host tissue antigens by virtue of molecular mimicry or are elicited by host antigens exposed to lymphocytes after tissue damage caused by the parasite. There is also disagreement about the relevance of immunologic autoreactivities to the pathogenesis of Chagasʹ disease because of the lack of reproducibility of some key reports supporting the autoimmunity hypothesis, conflicting data from independent laboratories, conclusions invalidated by advances in our understanding of the immunologic mechanisms underlying cell lysis, and, last but not least, a lack of direct, incontrovertible evidence that cross-reacting antibodies or autoreactive cells mediate the typical pathologic changes associated with human Chagasʹ disease. The data and views backing and questioning the autoimmunity hypothesis for Chagasʹ disease are summarized in this review.
  • Keywords
    reactive oxygen species (ROS) , desferoxamine , gluatathione , Ethanol
  • Journal title
    CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY REVIEWS
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY REVIEWS
  • Record number

    83307