PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Nov 2013)

Severe South American ocular toxoplasmosis is associated with decreased Ifn-γ/Il-17a and increased Il-6/Il-13 intraocular levels.

  • Alejandra de-la-Torre,
  • Arnaud Sauer,
  • Alexander W Pfaff,
  • Tristan Bourcier,
  • Julie Brunet,
  • Claude Speeg-Schatz,
  • Laurent Ballonzoli,
  • Odile Villard,
  • Daniel Ajzenberg,
  • Natarajan Sundar,
  • Michael E Grigg,
  • Jorge E Gomez-Marin,
  • Ermanno Candolfi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002541
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 11
p. e2541

Abstract

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In a cross sectional study, 19 French and 23 Colombian cases of confirmed active ocular toxoplasmosis (OT) were evaluated. The objective was to compare clinical, parasitological and immunological responses and relate them to the infecting strains. A complete ocular examination was performed in each patient. The infecting strain was characterized by genotyping when intraocular Toxoplasma DNA was detectable, as well as by peptide-specific serotyping for each patient. To characterize the immune response, we assessed Toxoplasma protein recognition patterns by intraocular antibodies and the intraocular profile of cytokines, chemokines and growth factors. Significant differences were found for size of active lesions, unilateral macular involvement, unilateral visual impairment, vitreous inflammation, synechiae, and vasculitis, with higher values observed throughout for Colombian patients. Multilocus PCR-DNA sequence genotyping was only successful in three Colombian patients revealing one type I and two atypical strains. The Colombian OT patients possessed heterogeneous atypical serotypes whereas the French were uniformly reactive to type II strain peptides. The protein patterns recognized by intraocular antibodies and the cytokine patterns were strikingly different between the two populations. Intraocular IFN-γ and IL-17 expression was lower, while higher levels of IL-13 and IL-6 were detected in aqueous humor of Colombian patients. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that South American strains may cause more severe OT due to an inhibition of the protective effect of IFN-γ.