Comparative transcriptomic analysis reveals translationally relevant processes in mouse models of malaria

Author:

Georgiadou Athina12ORCID,Dunican Claire12,Soro-Barrio Pablo1ORCID,Lee Hyun Jae3,Kaforou Myrsini12ORCID,Cunnington Aubrey J12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Section of Paediatric Infectious Disease, Department of Infectious Disease, Imperial College London

2. Centre for Paediatrics and Child Health, Imperial College London

3. Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland

Abstract

Recent initiatives to improve translation of findings from animal models to human disease have focussed on reproducibility but quantifying the relevance of animal models remains a challenge. Here, we use comparative transcriptomics of blood to evaluate the systemic host response and its concordance between humans with different clinical manifestations of malaria and five commonly used mouse models. Plasmodium yoelii 17XL infection of mice most closely reproduces the profile of gene expression changes seen in the major human severe malaria syndromes, accompanied by high parasite biomass, severe anemia, hyperlactatemia, and cerebral microvascular pathology. However, there is also considerable discordance of changes in gene expression between the different host species and across all models, indicating that the relevance of biological mechanisms of interest in each model should be assessed before conducting experiments. These data will aid the selection of appropriate models for translational malaria research, and the approach is generalizable to other disease models.

Funder

Imperial College London

UK Department for International Development, and European Union EDCTP2 program

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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