Kenya Medical Research Institute, Centre for Geographical Medicine Research Coast, Kilifi, Kenya.
J Immunol. 2013 Feb 1;190(3):1038-47. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1202438. Epub 2012 Dec 21.
Naturally acquired immunity to malaria develops slowly, requiring several years of repeated exposure to be effective. The cellular and molecular factors underlying this observation are only partially understood. Recent studies suggest that chronic Plasmodium falciparum exposure may induce functional exhaustion of lymphocytes, potentially impeding optimal control of infection. However, it remains unclear whether the "atypical" memory B cells (MBCs) and "exhausted" CD4 T cells described in humans exposed to endemic malaria are driven by P. falciparum per se or by other factors commonly associated with malaria, such as coinfections and malnutrition. To address this critical question we took advantage of a "natural" experiment near Kilifi, Kenya, and compared profiles of B and T cells of children living in a rural community where P. falciparum transmission is ongoing to the profiles of age-matched children living under similar conditions in a nearby community where P. falciparum transmission ceased 5 y prior to this study. We found that continuous exposure to P. falciparum drives the expansion of atypical MBCs. Persistent P. falciparum exposure was associated with an increased frequency of CD4 T cells expressing phenotypic markers of exhaustion, both programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) alone and PD-1 in combination with lymphocyte-activation gene-3 (LAG-3). This expansion of PD-1-expressing and PD-1/LAG-3-coexpressing CD4 T cells was largely confined to CD45RA(+) CD4 T cells. The percentage of CD45RA(+)CD27(+) CD4 T cells coexpressing PD-1 and LAG-3 was inversely correlated with frequencies of activated and classical MBCs. Taken together, these results suggest that P. falciparum infection per se drives the expansion of atypical MBCs and phenotypically exhausted CD4 T cells, which has been reported in other endemic areas.
疟疾自然获得性免疫的产生较为缓慢,需要经过数年的反复暴露才能实现。目前对于该现象的细胞和分子基础只有部分了解。最近的研究表明,慢性疟原虫感染可能导致淋巴细胞功能耗竭,从而影响对感染的最佳控制。然而,目前尚不清楚在接触地方性疟疾的人群中所描述的“非典型”记忆 B 细胞(MBC)和“耗竭”CD4 T 细胞是否是由疟原虫本身引起的,还是由其他通常与疟疾相关的因素引起的,如合并感染和营养不良。为了解决这个关键问题,我们利用肯尼亚基利菲附近的一个“自然”实验,比较了在一个农村社区(那里持续发生疟原虫传播)和一个附近社区(在该社区,疟原虫传播在 5 年前停止)生活的儿童的 B 细胞和 T 细胞特征。我们发现,持续暴露于疟原虫会驱动非典型 MBC 的扩增。持续的疟原虫暴露与表达耗竭表型标志物的 CD4 T 细胞的频率增加有关,这些标志物包括程序性细胞死亡蛋白-1(PD-1)单独表达和 PD-1 与淋巴细胞激活基因-3(LAG-3)共同表达。表达 PD-1 的 CD4 T 细胞和表达 PD-1/LAG-3 的 CD4 T 细胞的扩增主要局限于 CD45RA(+)CD4 T 细胞。CD45RA(+)CD27(+)CD4 T 细胞中同时表达 PD-1 和 LAG-3 的细胞百分比与激活的和经典的 MBC 频率呈负相关。总之,这些结果表明,疟原虫感染本身会驱动非典型 MBC 和表型耗竭的 CD4 T 细胞的扩增,这在其他地方性地区也有报道。