Impact of pulmonary African trypanosomes on the immunology and function of the lung

Abstract:

AbstractApproximately 20% of sleeping sickness patients exhibit respiratory complications, however, with a largely unknown role of the parasite. Here we show that tsetse fly-transmitted Trypanosoma brucei parasites rapidly and permanently colonize the lungs and occupy the extravascular spaces surrounding the blood vessels of the alveoli and bronchi. They are present as nests of multiplying parasites exhibiting close interactions with collagen and active secretion of extracellular vesicles. The local immune response shows a substantial increase of monocytes, macrophages, dendritic cells and γδ and activated αβ T cells and a later influx of neutrophils. Interestingly, parasite presence results in a significant reduction of B cells, eosinophils and natural killer cells. T. brucei infected mice show no infection-associated pulmonary dysfunction, mirroring the limited pulmonary clinical complications during sleeping sickness. However, the substantial reduction of the various immune cells may render individuals more susceptible to opportunistic infections, as evident by a co-infection experiment with respiratory syncytial virus. Collectively, these observations provide insights into a largely overlooked target organ, and may trigger new diagnostic and supportive therapeutic approaches for sleeping sickness.

Citation: Nat Commun 13(1):7083.

Date Published: 18th Nov 2022

Registered Mode: by DOI

Authors: Dorien Mabille, Laura Dirkx, Sofie Thys, Marjorie Vermeersch, Daniel Montenye, Matthias Govaerts, Sarah Hendrickx, Peter Takac, Johan Van Weyenbergh, Isabel Pintelon, Peter Delputte, Louis Maes, David Pérez-Morga, Jean-Pierre Timmermans, Guy Caljon

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Mabille, D., Dirkx, L., Thys, S., Vermeersch, M., Montenye, D., Govaerts, M., Hendrickx, S., Takac, P., Van Weyenbergh, J., Pintelon, I., Delputte, P., Maes, L., Pérez-Morga, D., Timmermans, J.-P., & Caljon, G. (2022). Impact of pulmonary African trypanosomes on the immunology and function of the lung. In Nature Communications (Vol. 13, Issue 1). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34757-w
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Created: 13th Jul 2026 at 12:53

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