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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, September 2003, p. 826-830, Vol. 10, No. 5
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.5.826-830.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratório de Parasitologia, Instituto Adolfo Lutz,1 Laboratório de Xenodiagnóstico, Instituto Dante Pazzanese de Cardiologia,2 Departamento de Microbiologia, Imunologia e Parasitologia, UNIFESP, São Paulo, SP, Brazil3
Received 24 March 2003/ Returned for modification 1 May 2003/ Accepted 8 July 2003
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After the acute phase following T. cruzi infection, parasites are rarely found in blood, and the diagnosis is mainly based on serology. Blood centers and clinical laboratories generally use hemagglutination, immunofluorescence, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with serum for the diagnosis of Chagas' disease by using antigens extracted from epimastigotes, the noninfective stage of T. cruzi. However, conventional serology is unable to distinguish whether patients treated with benznidazole are cured. A considerable number of results are inconclusive, even when different serological tests are used (2, 11, 17).
We have developed an ELISA using a recombinant protein corresponding to the N-terminal portion of the T. cruzi trans-sialidase (TS). This enzyme is produced by bloodstream trypomastigotes of T. cruzi, the parasite form responsible for disseminating the infection in mammalian hosts. TS contains two domains. One includes the active site and is located at the N terminus. The other is composed of 12-amino-acid repeats and is located at the C terminus (10, 28). The enzyme's N-terminal domain is responsible for the induction of specific antibodies that inhibit the enzymatic activity of TS during infection (14, 23, 24). Moreover, the N-terminal domain has important roles in the humoral (6, 15, 23) and cellular (26, 27) immune responses that control infection. Therefore, we aimed to investigate whether sera from patients with Chagas' disease specifically recognize this recombinant TS and if this recognition decreases in patients undergoing anti-T. cruzi chemotherapy with benznidazole.
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Chemotherapy and evaluation. Patients were treated for 60 days with 5 mg of benznidazole per kg of body weight per day (9). After treatment, they were evaluated for several years by clinical examination and parasitological and serological tests at 1-year intervals. Treatment and clinical evaluation were performed by one of us (Abilio Augusto Fragata-Filho). This protocol for the treatment of patients with Chagas' disease is traditionally used at the Instituto Dante Pazzanese de Cardiologia, São Paulo, which focuses mainly on the cardiac involvement and evolution of Chagas' disease (9).
Serum samples. The sensitivity and specificity of TS were determined by assaying 201 serum samples from 151 patients with chronic Chagas' disease before the specific treatment, 40 healthy individuals who had never lived in an area where T. cruzi is endemic and who were negative for Chagas' disease by conventional serological methods, and 10 patients with active visceral leishmaniasis (which was diagnosed serologically by the Laboratory of Parasitology, Instituto Aldofo Lutz). The evolution of treatment was analyzed by assaying 372 samples, 124 samples before treatment and 248 samples 1 and 2 years after treatment. All sera used in this study were stored at -20°C without additives and were colleted from individuals who had given informed consent to participate in this protocol, which was approved by the Ethics Committees of the Instituto Dante Pazzanese de Cardiologia and Instituto Adolfo Lutz.
Recombinant TS production and purification. Recombinant TS was generated and purified from Escherichia coli cells transformed with plasmid pTS-cat7, as described previously (25). The purity of each TS batch was checked by sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (12), and the protein concentration was estimated by the Bradford procedure (12).
TS ELISA. The TS ELISA was performed with microtiter polystyrene plates (flat bottom; Corning) coated with the recombinant TS. Each well was incubated overnight at 4°C with 200 ng of recombinant TS dissolved in 0.1 ml of 0.1 M NaHCO3 (pH 8.5). Unbound antigen was removed by washing the plates with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; pH 7.2) containing 0.05% Tween 20. The free binding sites were blocked by treating the wells with 5% skim milk-PBS. After 2 h, 50 µl of each serum sample diluted 1:50 in 5% skim milk-PBS was incubated for 60 min at 37°C. After five washes with PBS-Tween 20, the wells were incubated for 30 min at 37°C with a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-human immunoglobulin G (IgG; Life Technologies) diluted 1:10,000 in 5% skim milk-PBS. After a new wash cycle with PBS-Tween 20, substrate solution (0.1 M citric acid, 0.2 M Na2HPO4, 0.05% o-phenylenediamine, 0.1% H2O2) was added to each well, and the plates were left to stand at room temperature in the dark for 15 min. Color development was stopped by adding 50 µl of 4 N H2SO4, and the absorbance was measured with an ELISA reader (Multiscan) with a 492-nm filter. To standardize the ELISA reaction, 20 serum samples from healthy individuals and 20 serum samples from patients with Chagas' disease with different concentrations of T. cruzi antibodies, as determined by conventional serology, were used. Different concentrations of purified recombinant TS (0.1 to 5 µg/ml) on the microtiter plates, different conjugate dilutions (1/100 to 1/100,000), and different serum dilutions (1/5 to 1/500) were tested (data not shown). The optimal TS concentration was 2 µg/ml, and the optimal conjugate dilution was 1:10,000. Each serum sample was assayed in duplicate. The absorbance values were subtracted from the background, and the arithmetic mean was calculated. The cutoff for each reaction was three times the mean and standard deviation for 20 serum samples from healthy individuals. The values shown in the figures represent the absorbance at 492 nm relative to the cutoff absorbances.
Immunoblotting. SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting with purified recombinant TS were performed as described previously (30). One microgram of TS was loaded, fractionated by SDS-10% PAGE, and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. The membranes were cut into 3- to 4-mm-wide strips, blocked for 2 h with 5% skim milk-PBS, and incubated with serum diluted 1:50 at 37°C. After 1 h, the strips were washed with PBS and incubated for 30 min at 37°C with goat horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-human IgG diluted in 1% skim milk-PBS. Bound antibodies were visualized after incubation with 0.017% diaminobenzidine and 0.1% H2O2 in PBS.
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FIG. 1. Reactivities of sera from healthy individuals (squares), patients with Chagas' disease (circles), and patients with leishmaniasis (triangles) against recombinant TS by the TS ELISA. The results were calculated as the ratio of the absorbance of each serum sample at an optical density of 492 nm (A492) to the cutoff value. Values greater than 1.0 were considered reactive. The horizontal lines represent the arithmetic means.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Sensitivity, specificity, and 95% confidence intervals of recombinant TS in the ELISA
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Three groups of individuals were identified on the basis of the ELISA results. The first group, consisting of 60 patients, had values greater than 1 (mean value, 1.71) before treatment, and the first posttreatment samples showed a mean value of 0.91. The second sample (collected at least 1 year later) showed a mean value of 0.72. In both cases, the posttreatment samples presented values below the cutoff (Fig. 2A). These results were confirmed by immunoblotting with each serum sample. As shown in Fig. 2B, a serum sample collected before treatment reacted well with TS, while a serum sample collected from the same individual after treatment failed to do so. Similar results were obtained when we tested sera from several other patients, and no reaction was detected with sera from leishmaniasis patients (data not shown). Most relevant was the fact that this group of individuals had negative blood culture test results and no clinical signs of infection.
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FIG. 2. Treatment follow-up. The reactivities of sera from chronic Chagas' disease patients with successful therapy (A), a decrease in titers after treatment (C), and resistance to treatment (E) determined before benznidazole treatment ( ) and 1 year ( ) and 2 years ( ) after benznidazole treatment are shown. The values are the ratio of the absorbance of each serum sample at 492 nm to the reaction cutoff. Values greater than 1.0 were considered reactive. The horizontal lines represent the arithmetic means. Immunoblots for serum samples from the three groups of patients before treatment (Pre) and after treatment (Post-T) are shown in panels B, D, and F, respectively.
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Patients from the third group (n = 18) were considered resistant to treatment and presented clear signs of infection, including positive blood cultures. The sera from these individuals showed the same reactivities before and after treatment. The mean values for samples collected before treatment and 1 and 2 years after treatment were 1.97, 1.86, and 1.97, respectively (Fig. 2E). This result was confirmed by immunoblotting, as shown in Fig. 2F.
Figure 3 shows the data plotted as the distribution of the values for serum samples obtained from each group before and after treatment. The linear regression clearly indicates that the sera from the patients in the third group remained reactive to TS.
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FIG. 3. Distribution of reactivities of sera from each group of patients. Each point represents the reactivity of each serum sample before and after benznidazole treatment (second serum sample). (A) Chronic Chagas' disease patients with successful therapy; (B) chronic Chagas' disease patients with decreases in titers after treatment; (C) chronic Chagas' disease patients with resistance to treatment.
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More important, we have provided clear evidence that-anti-TS antibody levels decrease upon benznidazole treatment, as detected by ELISA with recombinant TS. We found a group of patients who showed reactivities below the cutoff levels 2 years after treatment and for whom no clinical symptoms or parasites were detectable by blood culture. This group was considered to have a distinct serological behavior after treatment. In contrast, two groups of patients presented reactivities above the cutoff after drug treatment. Posttherapy sera from one group, formed by 37% of the patients, exhibited positive results, but the values were lower than those obtained before treatment. This finding led us to assume that if treatment was unable to abolish all the parasites, it at least reduced the number of parasites in the circulation. Some of these patients still showed evidence of active infection. A second group of individuals corresponded to 14% of the patients and was considered to be resistant to treatment. Ten patients in this group had positive blood culture test results and no clinical improvement. They presented the same levels of anti-TS recognition before and after treatment.
Previous studies have shown that anti-TS antibodies are present in patients with active infection and that some of these antibodies inhibit the activity of the enzyme (14, 24). On the basis of this specific inhibition, the use of TS inhibition assays has been proposed for the monitoring of treatment (3, 16). In these studies the inhibitory antibodies seem to persist even when infection disappears, as evaluated by clinical and other immunological tests (15). In our case, the absence of a significant amount of antibodies distinguished the patients without clinical symptoms of infection. One explanation for this apparent contradiction is the fact that our method detected a different population of antibodies against TS, which may represent the majority of antibodies against the enzyme. These antibodies could possibly bind to the enzyme portions not involved in substrate binding. In addition, we used a solid-phase assay in which most of the accessible epitopes could be distinct from the substrate binding site. It would be interesting to compare the epitopes recognized by the different types of antibodies.
It has been accepted that the titers of protective IgG antibodies against trypomastigote antigens decrease following chemotherapy, when most of the parasites are eliminated (1, 7, 13). These antibodies were shown to react to parasite surface components (19), inducing complement-mediated lysis of trypomastigotes (11). Some are directed at proteins that induce complement resistance to the parasites (21); but some other trypomastigote antigens, such as mucins (2), proteins (7), and excreted antigens (29), have also been shown to detect a decrease in the levels of protective antibodies. In contrast, the levels of antibodies to epimastigote antigens are not dramatically changed after treatment. Such dissociation has been used as a criterion of cure in successfully treated patients (11).
In summary, the present data show that the catalytic domain of TS can also be used for the diagnosis and monitoring of Chagas' disease treatment, providing a simple methodology for monitoring the results of chemotherapy for Chagas' disease patients. After drug treatment the sera of some patients showed reduced reactivities, while the sera of other patients had more discrete changes in reactivity. Compared to other methods that use TS, the present one is simpler and does not depend on the measurement of TS activity, especially when several serum samples with serial dilutions should be used. The effective cure of the infection, however, requires negative results by clinical, serological, and parasitological tests after a long period of monitoring. Long-term clinical monitoring of the same patients is being conducted by one of us, and preliminary data suggest that benznidazole treatment is effective for most patients in the chronic phase of Chagas' disease.
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-galactosyl antibodies from patients with chronic Chagas disease. J. Clin. Lab. Anal. 7:307-316.[Medline]
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