Exacerbation of experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infection in mice by concomitant malaria

J Protozool. 1977 Nov;24(4):514-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1550-7408.1977.tb01003.x.

Abstract

The effect of malaria on the chronic phase of Chagas' disease was investigated in mice. The animals were given Plasmodium bergheri-infected red blood cells 2 to 12 months after their initial inoculation with trypomastigotes of 3 different strains of Trypanosoma cruzi (Y. CL and Gilmar). in all the experiments carried out with one of the strains (CL), a somewhat variable but always considerable percentage of mice (average 39%) relapsed in to the acute phase of Chagas' disease. This relapse was characterized by a significant increase in the number of circulating trypomastigotes. Recrudescence was observed also with a 2nd strain of T. cruzi (Gilmar), which is similar in many aspects to the CL strain, e.g. the morphology of blood stages, curved of parasitemia and susceptibility to antibodies in vitro. In mice whose chronic phase was induced by trypomastigotes of the Y strain, malaria infections did not induce a typical acute phas with high parasitemia by T. cruzi. Bloodstream forms of Y parasites differ from those of CL and Gilmar strains morphologically as well as immunologically, i.e. only the Y strain is easily agglutinated and partly inactivated by specific immune serum. In light of this and other known characteristics of the strains used in the present work, the author speculates on mechanisms which allow malaria infections selectively to suppress acquired host resistance to certain strains of T. cruzi.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Blood / parasitology
  • Chagas Disease / complications*
  • Chagas Disease / parasitology
  • Malaria / complications*
  • Malaria / parasitology
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Plasmodium berghei