Eosinophils Suppress the Migration of T Cells Into the Brain of Plasmodium berghei-Infected Ifnar1-/- Mice and Protect Them From Experimental Cerebral Malaria

Author:

Scheunemann Johanna F.,Reichwald Julia J.,Korir Patricia Jebett,Kuehlwein Janina M.,Jenster Lea-Marie,Hammerschmidt-Kamper Christiane,Lewis Matthew D.,Klocke Katrin,Borsche Max,Schwendt Kim E.,Soun Camille,Thiebes Stephanie,Limmer Andreas,Engel Daniel R.,Mueller Ann-Kristin,Hoerauf Achim,Hübner Marc P.,Schumak Beatrix

Abstract

Cerebral malaria is a potentially lethal disease, which is caused by excessive inflammatory responses to Plasmodium parasites. Here we use a newly developed transgenic Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbAAma1OVA) parasite that can be used to study parasite-specific T cell responses. Our present study demonstrates that Ifnar1-/- mice, which lack type I interferon receptor-dependent signaling, are protected from experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) when infected with this novel parasite. Although CD8+ T cell responses generated in the spleen are essential for the development of ECM, we measured comparable parasite-specific cytotoxic T cell responses in ECM-protected Ifnar1-/- mice and wild type mice suffering from ECM. Importantly, CD8+ T cells were increased in the spleens of ECM-protected Ifnar1-/- mice and the blood-brain-barrier remained intact. This was associated with elevated splenic levels of CCL5, a T cell and eosinophil chemotactic chemokine, which was mainly produced by eosinophils, and an increase in eosinophil numbers. Depletion of eosinophils enhanced CD8+ T cell infiltration into the brain and increased ECM induction in PbAAma1OVA-infected Ifnar1-/- mice. However, eosinophil-depletion did not reduce the CD8+ T cell population in the spleen or reduce splenic CCL5 concentrations. Our study demonstrates that eosinophils impact CD8+ T cell migration and proliferation during PbAAma1OVA-infection in Ifnar1-/- mice and thereby are contributing to the protection from ECM.

Funder

Jürgen Manchot Stiftung

Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst

Deutsches Zentrum für Infektionsforschung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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