Affiliation:
1. Departments of Pathology
2. Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Cerebral malaria (CM) is an infrequent but serious complication of
Plasmodium falciparum
infection in humans. Animal and human studies suggest that the pathogenesis of CM is immune mediated, but the precise mechanisms leading to cerebral pathology are unclear. In mice, infection with
Plasmodium berghei
ANKA results in CM on day 6 postinoculation (p.i.), while infection with the closely related strain
P. berghei
K173 does not result in CM. Infection with
P. berghei
K173 was associated with increased plasma gamma interferon (IFN-γ) at 24 h p.i. and with increased splenic and hepatic mRNAs for a range of cytokines (IFN-γ, interleukin-10 [IL-10], and IL-12) as well as the immunoregulatory enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. In contrast,
P. berghei
ANKA infection was associated with an absence of cytokine production at 24 h p.i. but a surge of IFN-γ production at 3 to 4 days p.i. When mice were coinfected with both ANKA and K173, they produced an early cytokine response, including a burst of IFN-γ at 24 h p.i., in a manner similar to animals infected with
P. berghei
K173 alone. These coinfected mice failed to develop CM. In addition, in a low-dose
P. berghei
K173 infection model, protection from CM was associated with early production of IFN-γ. Early IFN-γ production was present in NK-cell-depleted, γδ-cell-depleted, and Jα281
−/−
(NKT-cell-deficient) mice but absent from β2-microglobulin mice that had been infected with
P. berghei
K173. Taken together, the results suggest that the absence of a regulatory pathway involving IFN-γ and CD8
+
T cells in
P. berghei
ANKA infection allows the development of cerebral immunopathology.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
95 articles.
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