Affiliation:
1. Faculté de Médecine Paris VI, France.
Abstract
We have evaluated in in vitro conditions the possible cooperative effect of antimalarial antibodies with several human blood cell types. When used alone, immunoglobulin G from African adults who had reached a state of premunition against malaria was found to have no or very limited direct effect on invasion and multiplication of P. falciparum asexual blood stages. In contrast, these antibodies induced a marked specific inhibition of parasite growth in the presence of normal blood monocytes, and the inhibition did not appear to be strain dependent. No similar antibody-dependent cellular inhibitory effect was found using human blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes, lymphocytes, platelets, or adherent spleen cells. However, these cells could all exert in vitro some non-antibody-dependent inhibitory effect when present at high effector/target cell ratios.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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