Center for Global Health and Diseases, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, University Hospitals Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
JCI Insight. 2017 Sep 21;2(18). doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.95352.
Inflammation and monocytes are thought to be important to human malaria pathogenesis. However, the relationship of inflammation and various monocyte functions to acute malaria, recovery from acute malaria, and asymptomatic parasitemia in endemic populations is poorly understood.
We evaluated plasma cytokine levels, monocyte subsets, monocyte functional responses, and monocyte inflammatory transcriptional profiles of 1- to 10-year-old Kenyan children at the time of presentation with acute uncomplicated malaria and at recovery 6 weeks later; these results were compared with analogous data from asymptomatic children and adults in the same community.
Acute malaria was marked by elevated levels of proinflammatory and regulatory cytokines and expansion of the inflammatory "intermediate" monocyte subset that returned to levels of healthy asymptomatic children 6 weeks later. Monocytes displayed activated phenotypes during acute malaria, with changes in surface expression of markers important to innate and adaptive immunity. Functionally, acute malaria monocytes and monocytes from asymptomatic infected children had impaired phagocytosis of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes relative to asymptomatic children with no blood-stage infection. Monocytes from both acute malaria and recovery time points displayed strong and equivalent cytokine responsiveness to innate immune agonists that were independent of infection status. Monocyte transcriptional profiles revealed regulated and balanced proinflammatory and antiinflammatory and altered phagocytosis gene expression patterns distinct from malaria-naive monocytes.
These observations provide insights into monocyte functions and the innate immune response during uncomplicated malaria and suggest that asymptomatic parasitemia in children is not clinically benign.
Support for this work was provided by NIH/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (R01AI095192-05), the Burroughs Wellcome Fund/American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, and the Rainbow Babies & Children's Foundation.
炎症和单核细胞被认为对人类疟疾发病机制很重要。然而,炎症与各种单核细胞功能之间的关系,以及它们与地方性流行人群中的急性疟疾、从急性疟疾中恢复和无症状寄生虫血症的关系,人们了解甚少。
我们评估了 1 至 10 岁肯尼亚儿童在出现急性无并发症疟疾时以及 6 周后康复时的血浆细胞因子水平、单核细胞亚群、单核细胞功能反应和单核细胞炎症转录谱;将这些结果与同一社区的无症状儿童和成人的类似数据进行了比较。
急性疟疾表现为促炎和调节细胞因子水平升高,以及炎症“中间”单核细胞亚群扩张,6 周后恢复到健康无症状儿童的水平。急性疟疾期间单核细胞表现出激活表型,其表面标记物的表达发生变化,这些标记物对先天和适应性免疫很重要。在功能上,急性疟疾单核细胞和无症状感染儿童的单核细胞吞噬疟原虫感染红细胞的能力相对于无血期感染的无症状儿童受损。来自急性疟疾和恢复期的单核细胞对先天免疫激动剂表现出强烈和等效的细胞因子反应,而与感染状态无关。单核细胞转录谱显示调节和平衡的促炎和抗炎以及改变的吞噬作用基因表达模式,与疟疾初发单核细胞不同。
这些观察结果提供了对无并发症疟疾期间单核细胞功能和先天免疫反应的深入了解,并表明儿童无症状寄生虫血症并非临床良性。
这项工作得到了美国国立卫生研究院/国家过敏和传染病研究所(R01AI095192-05)、Burroughs Wellcome 基金/美国热带医学和卫生学会以及彩虹婴儿和儿童医院基金会的支持。