Malaria symptoms fade on repeat infections due to loss of immune
cells
Children who repeatedly become
infected with malaria often experience no clinical symptoms with these
subsequent infections, and a team led by UC San Francisco researchers has
discovered that this might be due at least in part to a depletion of specific
types of immune cells.
Working in Uganda, one of the
most malaria-plagued nations in Africa and one in which individuals are
repeatedly exposed to the malaria parasite, UCSF scientists found that a
depletion of immune cells known as gamma delta T cells diminishes inflammatory responses
in infected children—responses that when unabated can become debilitating or
deadly.
"These inflammatory immune
cells are depleted in children with repeated malaria exposure, and those that
remain behave differently than the same cell types in children who have not
previously been infected," said Prasanna Jagannathan, MD, an assistant
professor of medicine at UCSF, who conducted the lab analysis as part of a
study team led by Margaret Feeney, MD, a UCSF professor of experimental
medicine and pediatrics. The study was published online on August 27, 2014, in
the journal Science Translational Medicine.
Children with the fewest number
of these cells were more likely to be infected and to harbor malaria parasites,
but the scientists determined that they also were less likely to suffer from
clinical symptoms, such as fevers. In addition, specific genes associated with
anti-parasite immune responses were less activated in children with fewer
numbers of these cells.
The depletion of gamma delta T
cells appears to be beneficial in some ways and detrimental in others, Feeney
said. Individuals may no longer suffer symptoms, but they also might not clear
the parasite and may remain infectious, allowing the disease to be further
spread by mosquitos.
The inflammatory responses
associated with initial infection with the malaria parasite, Plasmodium
falciparum, may help clear the parasite from the bloodstream, but can also lead
to major symptoms including severe anemia, cerebral malaria, and even death.
For the study researchers
collected data on malaria infections, disease symptoms and immune responses in
78 four-year-olds who have been monitored since infancy as part of a malaria
research collaboration between UCSF and scientists from Makarere University in
Kampala, Africa, including Moses Kamya, MD, a co-author of the new study and
chair of the Department of Medicine at Makarere. The study was conducted in
Tororo, Uganda, where malaria now is more prevalent than in the Ugandan
capital. The children were followed for all of their medical care at a study
clinic and screened each month for the malaria parasite.
At one year of age, all children
in the study had shown clinical symptoms of malaria with each infection. At
four years, fewer than 10 percent were symptom-free upon infection, but one
year later more than 20 percent were symptom-free when infected.
While no immediately applicable
disease-fighting strategy has emerged from the new discovery, it points to
further avenues of study, Feeney said.
No comments:
Post a Comment