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曼氏血吸虫混合感染可预防脑部病变,但不能预防脑型疟疾的严重疾病和死亡。

Schistosoma co-infection protects against brain pathology but does not prevent severe disease and death in a murine model of cerebral malaria.

机构信息

Institute of Tropical Medicine, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.

出版信息

Int J Parasitol. 2011 Jan;41(1):21-31. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2010.06.008. Epub 2010 Aug 12.

Abstract

Co-infections of helminths and malaria parasites are common in human populations in most endemic areas. It has been suggested that concomitant helminth infections inhibit the control of malaria parasitemia but down-modulate severe malarial disease. We tested this hypothesis using a murine co-infection model of schistosomiasis and cerebral malaria. C57BL/6 mice were infected with Schistosoma mansoni and 8-9 weeks later, when Schistosoma infection was patent, mice were co-infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA strain. We found that a concomitant Schistosoma infection increased parasitemia at the beginning of the P. berghei infection. It did not protect against P. berghei-induced weight loss and hypothermia, and P. berghei-mono-infected as well as S. mansoni-P. berghei-co-infected animals showed a high case fatality between days 6 and 8 of malarial infection. However, co-infection significantly reduced P. berghei-induced brain pathology. Over 40% of the S. mansoni-P. berghei-co-infected animals that died during this period were completely protected against haemorrhaging, plugging of blood vessels and infiltration, indicating that mortality in these animals was not related to cerebral disease. Schistosoma mansoni-P. berghei-co-infected mice had elevated plasma concentrations of IL-5 and IL-13 and on day 6 lower levels of IFN-γ, IL-10, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) and monokine induced by IFN-γ (MIG) than P. berghei-mono-infected mice. We conclude that in P. berghei infections, disease and early death are caused by distinct pathogenic mechanisms, which develop in parallel and are differentially influenced by the immune response to S. mansoni. This might explain why, in co-infected mice, death could be induced in the absence of brain pathology.

摘要

在大多数流行地区的人类群体中,蠕虫和疟原虫寄生虫的合并感染很常见。有人认为,同时发生的蠕虫感染会抑制对疟疾寄生虫血症的控制,但会下调严重的疟疾疾病。我们使用曼氏血吸虫病和脑型疟疾的小鼠合并感染模型来检验这一假设。C57BL/6 小鼠感染曼氏血吸虫,8-9 周后,当曼氏血吸虫感染明显时,用伯氏疟原虫 ANKA 株对小鼠进行合并感染。我们发现,同时发生的曼氏血吸虫感染会增加伯氏疟原虫感染开始时的寄生虫血症。它不能防止伯氏疟原虫引起的体重减轻和体温过低,而且伯氏疟原虫单感染以及曼氏血吸虫-伯氏疟原虫合并感染的动物在疟疾感染的第 6 至 8 天表现出高病死率。然而,合并感染显著减轻了伯氏疟原虫引起的脑组织病理学变化。在这段时间内死亡的曼氏血吸虫-伯氏疟原虫合并感染动物中,超过 40%的动物完全免受出血、血管堵塞和浸润的影响,这表明这些动物的死亡率与脑部疾病无关。曼氏血吸虫-伯氏疟原虫合并感染的小鼠具有较高的血浆白细胞介素 5 和白细胞介素 13 浓度,而在第 6 天,其干扰素-γ、白细胞介素 10、单核细胞趋化蛋白-1(MCP-1)和干扰素-γ诱导的单核细胞趋化蛋白-1(MIG)的水平较低。我们的结论是,在伯氏疟原虫感染中,疾病和早期死亡是由不同的致病机制引起的,这些机制平行发展,并受到对曼氏血吸虫免疫反应的不同影响。这也许可以解释为什么在合并感染的小鼠中,在没有脑组织病理学变化的情况下也能诱导死亡。

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