Pathogenesis of liver lesions in Theileria orientalis-inoculated cattle and severe combined immunodeficiency mice with bovine erythrocyte transfusion.

Kikumi Ogihara,Yuko Naya, Masaru Kurotori, Tomoki Tsurumaru, Kieko Ishizawa,Sakae Itoga,Kazuyuki Sogawa,Akinori Shimada

BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH-TOKYO(2020)

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摘要
Theileria orientalis (T. orientalis) is a bovine protozoal disease similar to malaria in humans. Although the common outcome of malaria in humans and T. orientalis infection in cattle is hepatic disorder, the mechanisms of its development remain unknown. In this study, we investigated hepatocyte injury characterized by accumulation of macrophages with ingested erythrocytes in sinusoid and extramedullary hematopoiesis in cattle and mice experimentally infected with T. orientalis (T. orientalis-infected cattle and T. orientalis-infected mice). Vacuolization of hepatic cells was frequently observed in the vicinity of the aggregated macrophages in the liver sinusoids of T. orientalis-infected mice. A significant percentage of the macrophages accumulated in the liver sinusoids of the severely infected cattle and mice (14.6% and 24.2 to 53.2%, respectively) reacted positively with interleukin-1, interleukin-6 and TNF-α antibodies. Increase in the production of these cytokines was confirmed in T. orientalis-infected cattle and mice by real-time RT-PCR. These findings strongly suggest that increased cytokine production by the macrophages that have phagocytosed T. orientalis-infected erythrocytes causes hepatic disorder in T. orientalis-infected animals.
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