Jagannathan Prasanna, Eccles-James Ijeoma, Bowen Katherine, Nankya Felistas, Auma Ann, Wamala Samuel, Ebusu Charles, Muhindo Mary K, Arinaitwe Emmanuel, Briggs Jessica, Greenhouse Bryan, Tappero Jordan W, Kamya Moses R, Dorsey Grant, Feeney Margaret E
Department of Medicine, San Francisco General Hospital, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
PLoS Pathog. 2014 Jan;10(1):e1003864. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003864. Epub 2014 Jan 9.
Although evidence suggests that T cells are critical for immunity to malaria, reliable T cell correlates of exposure to and protection from malaria among children living in endemic areas are lacking. We used multiparameter flow cytometry to perform a detailed functional characterization of malaria-specific T cells in 78 four-year-old children enrolled in a longitudinal cohort study in Tororo, Uganda, a highly malaria-endemic region. More than 1800 episodes of malaria were observed in this cohort, with no cases of severe malaria. We quantified production of IFNγ, TNFα, and IL-10 (alone or in combination) by malaria-specific T cells, and analyzed the relationship of this response to past and future malaria incidence. CD4(+) T cell responses were measurable in nearly all children, with the majority of children having CD4(+) T cells producing both IFNγ and IL-10 in response to malaria-infected red blood cells. Frequencies of IFNγ/IL10 co-producing CD4(+) T cells, which express the Th1 transcription factor T-bet, were significantly higher in children with ≥2 prior episodes/year compared to children with <2 episodes/year (P<0.001) and inversely correlated with duration since malaria (Rho = -0.39, P<0.001). Notably, frequencies of IFNγ/IL10 co-producing cells were not associated with protection from future malaria after controlling for prior malaria incidence. In contrast, children with <2 prior episodes/year were significantly more likely to exhibit antigen-specific production of TNFα without IL-10 (P = 0.003). While TNFα-producing CD4(+) T cells were not independently associated with future protection, the absence of cells producing this inflammatory cytokine was associated with the phenotype of asymptomatic infection. Together these data indicate that the functional phenotype of the malaria-specific T cell response is heavily influenced by malaria exposure intensity, with IFNγ/IL10 co-producing CD4(+) T cells dominating this response among highly exposed children. These CD4(+) T cells may play important modulatory roles in the development of antimalarial immunity.
尽管有证据表明T细胞对疟疾免疫至关重要,但在疟疾流行地区生活的儿童中,缺乏可靠的与接触疟疾及免受疟疾侵害相关的T细胞指标。我们在乌干达托罗罗(一个疟疾高度流行地区)开展的一项纵向队列研究中,使用多参数流式细胞术对78名4岁儿童体内的疟疾特异性T细胞进行了详细的功能特征分析。该队列中观察到1800多次疟疾发作,无重症疟疾病例。我们对疟疾特异性T细胞产生IFNγ、TNFα和IL-10(单独或联合产生)的情况进行了量化,并分析了这种反应与过去和未来疟疾发病率之间的关系。几乎所有儿童的CD4(+) T细胞反应都可检测到,大多数儿童的CD4(+) T细胞在接触感染疟疾的红细胞后会产生IFNγ和IL-10。每年发作≥2次的儿童中,表达Th1转录因子T-bet的IFNγ/IL10共产生CD4(+) T细胞频率显著高于每年发作<2次的儿童(P<0.001),且与疟疾发作后的持续时间呈负相关(Rho = -0.39,P<0.001)。值得注意的是,在控制既往疟疾发病率后,IFNγ/IL10共产生细胞的频率与预防未来疟疾无关。相比之下,每年发作<2次的儿童显著更有可能出现不产生IL-10的TNFα抗原特异性产生(P = 0.003)。虽然产生TNFα的CD4(+) T细胞与未来的保护作用无独立关联,但缺乏产生这种炎性细胞因子的细胞与无症状感染的表型相关。这些数据共同表明,疟疾特异性T细胞反应的功能表型受疟疾暴露强度的严重影响,在高度暴露的儿童中,IFNγ/IL10共产生CD4(+) T细胞主导了这种反应。这些CD4(+) T细胞可能在抗疟疾免疫的发展中发挥重要的调节作用。