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Genetic Ablation and Pharmacological Blockade of Bradykinin B1 Receptor Unveiled a Detrimental Role for the Kinin System in Chagas Disease Cardiomyopathy.

Ana Carolina OliveiraAmanda Roberta Revoredo VicentinoDaniele AndradeIsabela Resende PereiraLeonardo Saboia VahiaOtacílio da Cruz MoreiraCarla Eponina Carvalho-PintoJulia Barbalho da MotaLeonardo MacielGlaucia Vilar-PereiraJoão B PesqueroJoseli Lannes-VieiraPierre SiroisAntonio Carlos Campos de CarvalhoJulio Scharfstein
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2023)
Chagas disease, the parasitic infection caused by Trypanosoma cruzi , afflicts about 6 million people in Latin America. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that T. cruzi may fuel heart parasitism by activating B1R, a G protein-coupled (brady) kinin receptor whose expression is upregulated in inflamed tissues. Studies in WT and B1R -/- mice showed that T. cruzi DNA levels (15 days post infection-dpi) were sharply reduced in the transgenic heart. FACS analysis revealed that frequencies of proinflammatory neutrophils and monocytes were diminished in B1R -/- hearts whereas CK-MB activity (60 dpi) was exclusively detected in B1R +/+ sera. Since chronic myocarditis and heart fibrosis (90 dpi) were markedly attenuated in the transgenic mice, we sought to determine whether a pharmacological blockade of the des-Arg 9 -bradykinin (DABK)/B1R pathway might alleviate chagasic cardiomyopathy. Using C57BL/6 mice acutely infected by a myotropic T. cruzi strain (Colombian), we found that daily treatment (15-60 dpi) with R-954 (B1R antagonist) reduced heart parasitism and blunted cardiac injury. Extending R-954 treatment to the chronic phase (120-160 dpi), we verified that B1R targeting (i) decreased mortality indexes, (ii) mitigated chronic myocarditis, and (iii) ameliorated heart conduction disturbances. Collectively, our study suggests that a pharmacological blockade of the proinflammatory KKS/DABK/B1R pathway is cardioprotective in acute and chronic Chagas disease.
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