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Immune-mediated mechanisms of parasite tissue sequestration during experimental cerebral malaria

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journal contribution
posted on 2010-09-15, 00:00 authored by F Amante, A Haque, A Stanley, F de Labastida Rivera, L Randall, Y Wilson, G Yeo, C Pieper, B Crabb, Tania De Koning-WardTania De Koning-Ward, R Lundie, M Good, A Pinzon-Charry, M Pearson, M Duke, D McManus, A Loukas, G Hill, C Engwerda
Cerebral malaria is a severe complication of malaria. Sequestration of parasitized RBCs in brain microvasculature is associated with disease pathogenesis, but our understanding of this process is incomplete. In this study, we examined parasite tissue sequestration in an experimental model of cerebral malaria (ECM). We show that a rapid increase in parasite biomass is strongly associated with the induction of ECM, mediated by IFN-γ and lymphotoxin α, whereas TNF and IL-10 limit this process. Crucially, we discovered that host CD4+ and CD8+ T cells promote parasite accumulation in vital organs, including the brain. Modulation of CD4+ T cell responses by helminth coinfection amplified CD4+ T cell-mediated parasite sequestration, whereas vaccination could generate CD4+ T cells that reduced parasite biomass and prevented ECM. These findings provide novel insights into immune-mediated mechanisms of ECM pathogenesis and highlight the potential of T cells to both prevent and promote infectious diseases.

History

Journal

Journal of immunology

Volume

185

Issue

6

Pagination

3632 - 3642

Publisher

American Association of Immunologists

Location

Bethesda, Md.

ISSN

0022-1767

eISSN

1550-6606

Language

eng

Notes

Published online before print August 18, 2010

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, American Association of Immunologists