Onditi Faith I, Nyamongo Onkoba W, Omwandho Charles O, Maina Naomi W, Maloba Fredrick, Farah Idle O, King Christopher L, Moore Julie M, Ozwara Hastings S
Department of Tropical and Infectious Diseases, Institute of Primate Research, PO Box 24481-00502, Karen, Nairobi, Kenya.
Department of Biochemistry, University of Nairobi, PO Box 30197-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
Malar J. 2015 Mar 18;14:118. doi: 10.1186/s12936-015-0631-5.
Placental malaria (PM) causes adverse pregnancy outcomes in the mother and her foetus. It is difficult to study PM directly in humans due to ethical challenges. This study set out to bridge this gap by determining the outcome of PM in non-immune baboons in order to develop a non-human primate model for the disease.
Ten pregnant baboons were acquired late in their third trimester (day 150) and randomly grouped as seven infected and three non-infected. Another group of four nulligravidae (non-pregnant) infected was also included in the analysis of clinical outcome. Malaria infection was intravenously initiated by Plasmodium knowlesi blood-stage parasites through the femoral vein on 160(th) day of gestation (for pregnant baboons). Peripheral smear, placental smear, haematological samples, and histological samples were collected during the study period. Median values of clinical and haematological changes were analysed using Kruskal-Wallis and Dunn's Multiple Comparison Test. Parasitaemia profiles were analysed using Mann Whitney U test. A Spearman's rank correlation was run to determine the relationship between the different variables of severity scores. Probability values of P <0.05 were considered significant.
Levels of white blood cells increased significantly in pregnant infected (34%) than in nulligravidae infected baboons (8%). Placental parasitaemia levels was on average 19-fold higher than peripheral parasitaemia in the same animal. Infiltration of parasitized erythrocytes and inflammatory cells were also observed in baboon placenta. Malaria parasite score increased with increase in total placental damage score (rs = 0.7650, P <0.05) and inflammatory score (rs = 0.8590, P <0.05). Although the sample size was small, absence of parasitized erythrocytes in cord blood and foetal placental region suggested lack of congenital malaria in non-immune baboons.
This study has demonstrated accumulation of parasitized red blood cells and infiltration of inflammatory cells in the placental intravillous space (IVS) of baboons that are non-immune to malaria. This is a key feature of placental falciparum malaria in humans. This presents the baboon as a new model for the characterization of malaria during pregnancy.
胎盘疟疾(PM)会导致母亲及其胎儿出现不良妊娠结局。由于伦理挑战,很难直接在人体中研究PM。本研究旨在通过确定非免疫狒狒中PM的结局来弥合这一差距,从而开发一种针对该疾病的非人类灵长类动物模型。
在妊娠晚期(第150天)获取10只怀孕的狒狒,并随机分为7只感染组和3只未感染组。另一组4只感染的未孕狒狒(未怀孕)也纳入临床结局分析。在妊娠第160天(针对怀孕狒狒),通过股静脉静脉注射诺氏疟原虫血液期寄生虫引发疟疾感染。在研究期间收集外周血涂片、胎盘涂片、血液学样本和组织学样本。使用Kruskal-Wallis和Dunn多重比较检验分析临床和血液学变化的中位数。使用Mann Whitney U检验分析寄生虫血症谱。进行Spearman等级相关性分析以确定严重程度评分的不同变量之间的关系。P<0.05的概率值被认为具有统计学意义。
怀孕感染的狒狒白细胞水平(34%)比未孕感染的狒狒(8%)显著升高。在同一只动物中,胎盘寄生虫血症水平平均比外周寄生虫血症高19倍。在狒狒胎盘中也观察到被寄生红细胞和炎性细胞的浸润。疟原虫评分随着胎盘总损伤评分(rs = 0.7650,P<0.05)和炎症评分(rs = 0.8590,P<0.05)的增加而增加。尽管样本量较小,但脐带血和胎儿胎盘区域未发现被寄生红细胞,这表明非免疫狒狒不存在先天性疟疾。
本研究证明了在对疟疾无免疫力的狒狒的胎盘绒毛间隙(IVS)中存在被寄生红细胞的积累和炎性细胞的浸润。这是人类胎盘恶性疟疾的一个关键特征。这表明狒狒是妊娠期间疟疾特征化研究的一种新模型。