Boutlis Craig S, Weinberg J Brice, Baker Joanne, Bockarie Moses J, Mgone Charles S, Cheng Qin, Anstey Nicholas M
Menzies School of Health Research, P.O. Box 41096, Casuarina, NT 0811, Australia.
Infect Immun. 2004 Dec;72(12):6932-8. doi: 10.1128/IAI.72.12.6932-6938.2004.
Individuals in areas of intense malaria transmission exhibit resistance (or tolerance) to levels of parasitemia in their blood that would normally be associated with febrile illness in malaria-naive subjects. The resulting level of parasitemia associated with illness (the pyrogenic threshold) is highest in childhood and lowest in adulthood. Clinical parallels between malarial and bacterial endotoxin tolerance have led to the supposition that both share common physiological processes, with nitric oxide (NO) proposed as a candidate mediator. The hypotheses that NO mediates tolerance and blood stage parasite killing in vivo were tested by determining its relationship to age and parasitemia cross-sectionally and longitudinally in a population of 195 children and adults from Papua New Guinea encountering intense malaria exposure. Despite pharmacological clearance of asymptomatic parasitemia, NO production and mononuclear cell NO synthase (NOS) activity were remarkably stable within individuals over time, were not influenced by parasitemia, and varied little with age. These results contrast with previous smaller cross-sectional studies. Baseline NO production and NOS activity did not protect against recurrent parasitemia, consistent with previous data suggesting that NO does not have antiparasitic effects against blood stage infection in vivo. The NO indices studied were markedly higher in specimens from study subjects than in samples from Australian controls, and NOS activity was significantly associated with plasma immunoglobulin E levels, consistent with induction of NO by chronic exposure to other infections and/or host genetic factors. These results suggest that NO is unlikely to mediate killing of blood stage parasites in this setting and is unlikely to be the primary mediator in the acquisition or maintenance of malarial tolerance.
在疟疾传播强烈的地区,个体对其血液中寄生虫血症水平表现出抗性(或耐受性),而这种水平在未感染疟疾的个体中通常会引发发热疾病。与疾病相关的寄生虫血症水平(热原阈值)在儿童期最高,在成年期最低。疟疾与细菌内毒素耐受性之间的临床相似性导致人们推测二者具有共同的生理过程,一氧化氮(NO)被认为是一种潜在的介质。通过在来自巴布亚新几内亚的195名儿童和成人中,横断面和纵向地确定NO与年龄和寄生虫血症的关系,来检验NO在体内介导耐受性和血液阶段寄生虫杀伤的假设。尽管通过药物清除了无症状寄生虫血症,但个体内的NO产生和单核细胞NO合酶(NOS)活性随时间推移非常稳定,不受寄生虫血症影响,且随年龄变化很小。这些结果与之前规模较小的横断面研究形成对比。基线NO产生和NOS活性并不能预防复发性寄生虫血症,这与之前的数据一致,表明NO在体内对血液阶段感染没有抗寄生虫作用。研究对象样本中的NO指标明显高于澳大利亚对照样本,且NOS活性与血浆免疫球蛋白E水平显著相关,这与长期暴露于其他感染和/或宿主遗传因素诱导NO产生一致。这些结果表明,在这种情况下,NO不太可能介导血液阶段寄生虫的杀伤,也不太可能是获得或维持疟疾耐受性的主要介质。