The Interaction of Classical Complement Component C1 with Parasite and Host Calreticulin Mediates Trypanosoma cruzi Infection of Human Placenta
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Castillo, Christian
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The Interaction of Classical Complement Component C1 with Parasite and Host Calreticulin Mediates Trypanosoma cruzi Infection of Human Placenta
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Abstract
Background: 9 million people are infected with Trypanosoma cruzi in Latin America, plus more than 300,000 in the United
States, Canada, Europe, Australia, and Japan. Approximately 30% of infected individuals develop circulatory or digestive
pathology. While in underdeveloped countries transmission is mainly through hematophagous arthropods, transplacental
infection prevails in developed ones.
Methodology/Principal Findings: During infection, T. cruzi calreticulin (TcCRT) translocates from the endoplasmic reticulum
to the area of flagellum emergence. There, TcCRT acts as virulence factor since it binds maternal classical complement
component C1q that recognizes human calreticulin (HuCRT) in placenta, with increased parasite infectivity. As measured ex
vivo by quantitative PCR in human placenta chorionic villi explants (HPCVE) (the closest available correlate of human
congenital T. cruzi infection), C1q mediated up to a 3–5-fold increase in parasite load. Because anti-TcCRT and anti-HuCRT
F(ab9)2 antibody fragments are devoid of their Fc-dependent capacity to recruit C1q, they reverted the C1q-mediated
increase in parasite load by respectively preventing its interaction with cell-bound CRTs from both parasite and HPCVE
origins. The use of competing fluid-phase recombinant HuCRT and F(ab9)2 antibody fragments anti-TcCRT corroborated this.
These results are consistent with a high expression of fetal CRT on placental free chorionic villi. Increased C1q-mediated
infection is paralleled by placental tissue damage, as evidenced by histopathology, a damage that is ameliorated by anti-
TcCRT F(ab9)2 antibody fragments or fluid-phase HuCRT.
Conclusions/Significance: T. cruzi infection of HPCVE is importantly mediated by human and parasite CRTs and C1q. Most
likely, C1q bridges CRT on the parasite surface with its receptor orthologue on human placental cells, thus facilitating the
first encounter between the parasite and the fetal derived placental tissue. The results presented here have several potential
translational medicine aspects, specifically related with the capacity of antibody fragments to inhibit the C1q/CRT
interactions and thus T. cruzi infectivity.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129203
DOI: doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002376
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PLoS Negl Trop Dis 7(8): e2376
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