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KMID : 0381120230450020183
Genes and Genomics
2023 Volume.45 No. 2 p.183 ~ p.190
Effect of parasitic infection on muscular function of dystrophin gene (Dmd) deficient mouse
Shin Ha-Rim

Ko Eun-Ji
Kang Yun-Jeong
Yu Hak-Sun
Fahimeh Ramezani Tehrani
Cha Hee-Jae
Abstract
Background : Previous studies have reported many cases of Trichinella spiralis (T. spiralis) infection in normal skeletal muscle but there is little research on T. spiralis infection in abnormal muscle tissue.

Objective : To identify the effect of T. spiralis infection on muscular dystrophy, this study compared aspects of infection between no rmal (C57BL/10) and dystrophin-deficient Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) mdx mice.

Method : Infection rate was found to be lower in mdx mice than in C57BL/10 mice at early stages of infection; however, infection and inflammation in mdx mice persisted at later stages of infection while the infection rate and inflammation in C57BL/10 mice decreased gradually. The inflammation area was proportional to the degree of infection in both groups. Muscle strength was measured by the time of latency to fall in the wire-hanging test. Hanging time was shorter in the infected group than in the uninfected group in both C57BL/10 and mdx mice.

Results : Muscle strength was also reduced in mdx mice compared with C57BL/10 mice in both the un-infected and infected groups. The muscle intracellular cytokines TGF-¥â and IL-6 were continuously expressed from early stage to late-stage infection. IL-10 was strongly expressed at the early stage of infection but decreased as the infection progressed. TNF-¥á expression remained stable from early to late-stage infection in mdx mice, while TNF-¥á was elevated only during early-stage infection in C57BL/10 mice. The degree of muscle damage was significantly higher in mdx mice than in C57BL/10 mice because of the high level of serum creatine kinase (CK).

Conclusion
These results suggest that mdx mice continued in infection and inflammation until the late stages of disease, which was in contrast to the C57BL/10 mice that recovered to some extent in the late stage of infection. In addition, that dystrophin-deficient mice are not suitable for T. spiralis infection compared to normal mice, and the degree of inflammation may be worse in mdx mice.
KEYWORD
Cytokine, Trichinella spiralis, Mdx mice, Muscular dystrophy, Infection
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