Of further interest, assays performed in cultures supplemented with exogenous BK and/or HOE-140 suggested that the increased frequency of Th17 cells is, at BMS-777607 in vitro least in part, dependent upon the activation of the B2R kinin receptor. Previous studies in A/J mice infected acutely with the Brazil strain showed that captopril administrated orally improves cardiac function [26]. Although not excluding the beneficial roles that ACE inhibitors bring to cardiac patients, our in
vitro findings raise the possibility that, depending upon the T. cruzi strain and genetic make-up of the host, the administration of captopril may induce immunological changes that could aggravate chagasic myocardiopathy. Although our in vitro findings cannot be extrapolated readily to the in vivo settings, the finding that captopril reduced the frequency of IL-10-producing macrophages and increased IL-17-producing cells might aggravate T cell-dependent immunopathology. Among PBMC, monocytes are the host cells invaded preferentially by Y strain T. cruzi
trypomastigotes [18]. It is well established that these APCs are able to process and present peptide antigens in a MHC-restricted manner, and along with DCs contribute to the initiation of adaptive immunity through the up-regulation of co-stimulatory molecules and AZD1208 clinical trial enhanced cytokine production [18]. Highly expressed in the endothelium lining, ACE plays an important role in blood pressure regulation [27]. APCs express ACE (CD143), and its expression is induced during the differentiation
of human monocytes [28,29]. Evidence exists that ACE may play an immunomodulatory role by generating Ang II and/or by swiftly degrading BK agonists generated by kallikrein or microbial protease [30]. ACE 10/10 mice present macrophages overexpressing ACE and display exuberant immune responses, which has been associated with the enhanced presentation of MHC class I-peptides to CD8+ T cells observed in these mice [21]. It was proposed that these effects were due, at least in part, to ACE’s ability to modify the C termini of peptides for presentation by MHC class I molecules [21,31]. In another interesting finding, we observed that the addition of captopril to monocyte suspensions translated into increased expression of Liothyronine Sodium ACE (CD143), whereas IL-10 expression is decreased reciprocally. Previous studies by our group and by other investigations have linked IL-10 expression to protection of Chagas heart disease [18,23]. Thus, it is conceivable that chagasic patients treated with captopril could present enhanced CD8+ T cell response in an environment lacking immunomodulatory mechanisms, given the decrease in IL-10 expression, which could lead to an aggravation of cardiac disease. The anti-inflammatory property of captopril has been associated with suppression of the synthesis of proinflammatory cytokines [30,31].