Liver Immunology Group, Centenary Institute and AW Morrow Gastroenterology and Liver Centre, University of Sydney and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Front Microbiol. 2015 Feb 18;6:41. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00041. eCollection 2015.
During the pre-erythrocytic asymptomatic phase of malarial infection, sporozoites develop transiently inside less than 100 hepatocytes that subsequently release thousands of merozoites. Killing of these hepatocytes by cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) confers protection to subsequent malarial infection, suggesting that this bottleneck phase in the parasite life cycle can be targeted by vaccination. During natural transmission, although some CTLs are generated in the skin draining lymph nodes, they are unable to eliminate the parasite, suggesting that the liver is important for the sporozoite to escape immune surveillance. The contribution of the organ to this process is unclear. Based on the known ability of several hepatic antigen-presenting cells (APCs) to induce primary activation of CD8 T cells and tolerance, malarial antigens presented by both infected hepatocytes and/or hepatic cross-presenting APCs should result in tolerance. However, our latest model predicts that due to the low frequency of infected hepatocytes, some T cells recognizing sporozoite epitopes with high affinity should differentiate into CTLs. In this review, we discuss two possible models to explain why CTLs generated in the liver and skin draining lymph nodes are unable to eliminate the parasite: (1) sporozoites harness the tolerogenic property of the liver; (2) CTLs are not tolerized but fail to detect infected cells due to sparse infection of hepatocytes and the very short liver stage. We propose that while malaria sporozoites might use the ability of the liver to tolerize both naive and effector cells, they have also developed strategies to decrease the probability of encounter between CTLs and infected liver cells. Thus, we predict that to achieve protection, vaccination strategies should aim to boost intrahepatic activation and/or increase the chance of encounter between sporozoite-specific CTLs and infected hepatocytes.
在疟原虫感染的红细胞前无症状期,子孢子在不到 100 个肝细胞内短暂发育,随后释放数千个裂殖子。细胞毒性 T 细胞 (CTL) 杀死这些肝细胞可提供对后续疟原虫感染的保护,表明寄生虫生命周期中的这个瓶颈阶段可以作为疫苗接种的靶点。在自然传播过程中,尽管在引流淋巴结的皮肤中产生了一些 CTL,但它们无法消除寄生虫,这表明肝脏对疟原虫子孢子逃避免疫监视很重要。该器官对此过程的贡献尚不清楚。基于几种肝抗原呈递细胞 (APC) 诱导 CD8 T 细胞初始激活和耐受的已知能力,由感染肝细胞和/或肝交叉呈递 APC 呈递的疟原虫抗原应导致耐受。然而,我们的最新模型预测,由于感染肝细胞的频率较低,一些识别高亲和力子孢子表位的 T 细胞应分化为 CTL。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了两种可能的模型来解释为什么在肝脏和皮肤引流淋巴结中产生的 CTL 无法消除寄生虫:(1)子孢子利用肝脏的耐受特性;(2)CTL 没有耐受化,但由于肝细胞感染稀疏和肝脏阶段非常短而无法检测到感染细胞。我们提出,尽管疟原虫子孢子可能利用肝脏来耐受幼稚和效应细胞,但它们也已制定了降低 CTL 与感染肝细胞相遇概率的策略。因此,我们预测,为了实现保护,疫苗接种策略应旨在增强肝内激活和/或增加疟原虫子孢子特异性 CTL 与感染肝细胞相遇的机会。