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
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
1 articles.
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