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The therapeutic effect of the neuropeptide hormone somatostatin on Schistosoma mansoni caused liver fibrosis

The neuropeptide somatostatin is one of the major regulatory peptides in the central nervous system and the digestive tract. Our recent work has delineated an association between fibrosis and low levels of endogenous somatostatin plasma levels in Schistosoma mansoni infected subjects. Based on these...

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Published in:BMC infectious diseases 2005-06, Vol.5 (1), p.45-45, Article 45
Main Authors: Chatterjee, Shyama, Vrolix, Gunther, Depoortere, Inge, Peeters, Theo, Van Marck, Eric
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The neuropeptide somatostatin is one of the major regulatory peptides in the central nervous system and the digestive tract. Our recent work has delineated an association between fibrosis and low levels of endogenous somatostatin plasma levels in Schistosoma mansoni infected subjects. Based on these results this paper explores the therapeutic potential of somatostatin in a mouse model of hepatic fibrosis associated with S. mansoni infections. Groups of outbred Swiss mice were infected with 100 S. mansoni cercariae, infection maintained till weeks 10 or 14, and then somatostatin therapy delivered in two regimens -- either a one or a two-day treatment. All animals were sacrificed one week after therapy and controlled for liver, spleen and total body weight. Circulating somatostatin levels in mice plasma were measured at the time of sacrifice by means of a radio-immuno assay. GraphPad Prism was used for statistical calculations. Somatostatin administration showed little toxicity, probably due to its short half-life. Total liver and spleen weights of S. mansoni infected animals increased over time, with no changes observed due to somatostatin therapy. Total body weights were decreased after infection but were not affected by somatostatin therapy. Snap frozen liver sections were stained with haematoxylin-eosin or Masson's trichrome to study parasite count, hepatocyte status, granuloma size and cellularity. After somatostatin treatment mean egg counts per liver section (43.76 +/- 3.56) were significantly reduced as compared to the egg counts in untreated mice after 10 weeks of infection (56.01 +/- 3.34) (P = 0.03). Similar significant reduction in parasite egg counts were also observed after somatostatin treatment at 14 weeks of infection (56.62 +/- 3.02) as compared to untreated animals (69.82 +/- 2.77)(P = 0.006). Fibrosis was assessed from the spectrophotometric determination of tissue hydroxyproline. Infection with S. mansoni caused increased hydroxyproline levels (9.37 +/- 0.63 micromol at wk 10; 9.65 +/- 0.96 micromol at wk 14) as compared to uninfected animals (1.06 +/- 0.10 micromol). This significant increase in collagen content (P = 0.01; 0.007 respectively) marks the fibrosis observed at these time points. Treatment with somatostatin resulted in a significant decrease in hydroxyproline levels both at wk 10 (4.76 +/- 0.58 micromol) and at wk 14 (5.8 +/- 1.13 micromol) (P = 0.01; 0.03 respectively). Endogenous somatostatin levels were increased at wk 10
ISSN:1471-2334
1471-2334
DOI:10.1186/1471-2334-5-45