McKenzie F Ellis, Smith David L, O'Meara Wendy P, Riley Eleanor M
Fogarty International Center, Building 16, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Adv Parasitol. 2008;66:1-46. doi: 10.1016/S0065-308X(08)00201-7.
From the 1920s to the 1970s, a large body of principles and evidence accumulated about the existence and character of 'strains' among the Plasmodium species responsible for human malaria. An extensive research literature examined the degree to which strains were autonomous, stable biological entities, distinguishable by clinical, epidemiological or other features, and how this knowledge could be used to benefit medical and public health practice. Strain theory in this era was based largely on parasite phenotypes related to clinical virulence, reactions to anti-malarial drugs, infectivity to mosquitoes, antigenic properties and host immunity, latency and relapse. Here we review the search for a definition of 'strain', suggest how the data and discussion shaped current understandings of many aspects of malaria and sketch a number of specific connections with perspectives from the past 30 years.
从20世纪20年代到70年代,积累了大量关于导致人类疟疾的疟原虫物种中“菌株”的存在及其特征的原理和证据。大量研究文献探讨了菌株在多大程度上是自主、稳定的生物实体,可通过临床、流行病学或其他特征加以区分,以及如何利用这些知识造福医学和公共卫生实践。这个时代的菌株理论主要基于与临床毒力、对抗疟药物的反应、对蚊子的传染性、抗原特性和宿主免疫力、潜伏期和复发相关的寄生虫表型。在此,我们回顾了对“菌株”定义的探寻,指出数据和讨论如何塑造了当前对疟疾诸多方面的理解,并勾勒了与过去30年观点的一些具体联系。