饮食和卵巢切除对刚地弓形虫脑感染的影响:大鼠的功能改变和神经元丢失。

IF 4.1 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Brain communications Pub Date : 2024-12-31 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcae441
Nene Ahidjo, Paul F Seke Etet, Leonard Ngarka, Frederic Maidawa Yaya, Ethel W Ndianteng, Aude L Eyenga Nna, Luc Yvan Meka'a Zang, Christelle Kemmo, Caroline N C Nwasike, Floriane G Yonkeu Tatchou, Wepnyu Y Njamnshi, Leonard N Nfor, Patrick V Tsouh Fokou, Sefirin Djiogue, Fabrice Fekam Boyom, Bonaventure T Ngadjui, Alfred K Njamnshi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

流行病学证据表明,刚地弓形虫潜伏感染与神经精神疾病的发生有关,多种免疫和环境因素通过改变宿主免疫应答发挥关键的病理生理作用。我们研究了弓形虫感染末期大鼠的认知和运动改变,以及考虑到营养不良和更年期对免疫和抗感染的作用,低蛋白饮食、高脂肪饮食或卵巢切除术是否会加速它们的发育。两组实验分别用2月龄(157.5±4.3 g, n = 42)只雄性(n = 18)和雌性(n = 24)只Wistar大鼠感染弓形虫(ATCC 40050)。对低蛋白饮食、高脂肪饮食和去卵巢的感染大鼠分别在感染末期和早期分别进行野外和高架迷宫试验。感染晚期(90天)和早期(17天)低蛋白饮食喂养组的小鼠体重显著下降(分别为42.42%,P = 0.016和57.14%,P < 0.001),体温升高(分别为P = 0.001和P < 0.001),血糖水平下降(分别为P = 0.006和P = 0.020),有认知和运动障碍的迹象,神经元数量减少。在高脂肪饮食喂养和切除卵巢的感染动物中观察到的变化较温和。对刚地弓形虫感染大鼠进行低蛋白饲粮喂养可加速感染终末期的发生。因此,低蛋白饮食可以将早期缓慢的弓形虫感染转化为具有神经精神表现和可能的神经退行性变的活动性神经弓形虫病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effects of diet and ovariectomy on Toxoplasma gondii brain infection: functional alterations and neuronal loss in rats.

Epidemiological evidence associates Toxoplasma gondii latent infection with the development of neuropsychiatric disorders, and various immunological and environmental factors play key pathophysiological roles through host immune response alterations. We investigated the cognitive and motor alterations occurring in the terminal stage of T. gondii infection in rats, and whether a low-protein diet, a high-fat diet or ovariectomy may accelerate their development, given the role of malnutrition and menopause on immunity and resistance to infection. In two sets of experiments, 2-month-old (157.5 ± 4.3 g, n = 42) male (n = 18) and female (n = 24) Wistar rats were infected with T. gondii (ATCC 40050). Open-field and elevated plus maze tests were performed in the terminal stage of infection first and then in the early stage in low-protein diet-fed, high-fat diet-fed and ovariectomized infected rats. Late-stage (90 days) infected and early-stage (17 days) low-protein diet-fed groups showed significant decreases in body weight (42.42%↓, P = 0.016 and 57.14%↓, P < 0.001 versus non-infected, respectively), increases in body temperature (P = 0.001 and P < 0.001, respectively), decreases in blood glucose levels (P = 0.006 and P = 0.020, respectively), signs of cognitive and motor impairment and lower neuron counts. The alterations observed in high-fat diet-fed and ovariectomized infected animals were milder. Low-protein diet feeding to T. gondii-infected rats accelerated the occurrence of the infection terminal stage. Thus, a diet low in proteins could transform a slow early-stage T. gondii infection into an active neurotoxoplasmosis with neuropsychiatric manifestations and possible neurodegeneration in rats.

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