Bansal Geetha P, Weinstein Corey S, Kumar Nirbhay
Department of Tropical Medicine, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine and Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases Research Center, Tulane University, 1440 Canal Street, Room 2311 #8317, New Orleans, 70112 LA, United States.
Department of Tropical Medicine, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine and Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases Research Center, Tulane University, 1440 Canal Street, Room 2311 #8317, New Orleans, 70112 LA, United States.
Acta Trop. 2016 May;157:96-101. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2016.01.033. Epub 2016 Feb 3.
During natural infection malaria parasites are injected into the bloodstream of a human host by the bite of an infected female Anopheles mosquito. Both asexual and mature sexual stages of Plasmodium circulate in the blood. Asexual forms are responsible for clinical malaria while sexual stages are responsible for continued transmission via the mosquitoes. Immune responses generated against various life cycle stages of the parasite have important roles in resistance to malaria and in reducing malaria transmission. Phagocytosis of free merozoites and erythrocytic asexual stages has been well studied, but very little is known about similar phagocytic clearance of mature sexual stages, which are critical for transmission. We evaluated phagocytic uptake of mature sexual (gametocyte) stage parasites by a human monocyte cell line in the absence of immune sera. We found that intact mature stages do not undergo phagocytosis, unless they are either killed or freed from erythrocytes. In view of this observation, we propose that the inability of mature gametocytes to be phagocytized may actually result in malaria transmission advantage. On the other hand, mature gametocytes that are not transmitted to mosquitoes during infection will eventually die and undergo phagocytosis, initiating immune responses that may have transmission blocking potential. A better understanding of early phagocytic clearance and immune responses to gametocytes may identify additional targets for transmission blocking strategies.
在自然感染过程中,疟原虫通过受感染雌性按蚊的叮咬被注入人类宿主的血液中。疟原虫的无性和成熟有性阶段都在血液中循环。无性形式导致临床疟疾,而有性阶段则负责通过蚊子持续传播。针对寄生虫不同生命周期阶段产生的免疫反应在抵抗疟疾和减少疟疾传播方面发挥着重要作用。对游离裂殖子和红细胞内无性阶段的吞噬作用已得到充分研究,但对于对传播至关重要的成熟有性阶段的类似吞噬清除作用却知之甚少。我们评估了在没有免疫血清的情况下人单核细胞系对成熟有性(配子体)阶段寄生虫的吞噬摄取。我们发现完整的成熟阶段不会被吞噬,除非它们被杀死或从红细胞中释放出来。鉴于这一观察结果,我们提出成熟配子体无法被吞噬实际上可能导致疟疾传播优势。另一方面,在感染期间未传播给蚊子的成熟配子体最终会死亡并被吞噬,引发可能具有传播阻断潜力的免疫反应。更好地了解对配子体的早期吞噬清除和免疫反应可能会确定传播阻断策略的其他靶点。