Author:
RUDIN W.,QUESNIAUX V.,FAVRE N.,BORDMANN G.
Abstract
The lack of correlation between parasitaemia and anaemia in severe
malaria indicates that factors in addition to schizont
rupture or erythrophagocytosis contribute to anaemia. We asked whether
malaria
toxin (MT) from Plasmodium berghei
or P. chabaudi might impair erythropoiesis. Daily intraperitoneal
injection of MT into C57BL/6 mice induced a transient
reduction of RBC values by 25–30% after about 2 weeks, followed
by increased haematopoiesis in the spleen as compared
to mice receiving uninfected RBC preparations. There was a 3 (P.
berghei) to 8-fold (P. chabaudi) increase of total
proliferative activity in the spleen. Flow cytometric analyses showed that
this was accompanied by some differentiation
of TER-119 positive erythroid cells and of Gr-1 positive myeloid cells.
Erythroid
and myeloid progenitor cell-derived
colony assays confirmed these results and revealed an increase in the number
of CFU-E ([les ]200-fold), BFU-E ([les ]10-fold)
and CFU-GM ([les ]20-fold) in the spleen of MT treated mice, as compared
to controls.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
17 articles.
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