Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Immunology Graduate Program, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Nat Rev Immunol. 2019 Jul;19(7):457-471. doi: 10.1038/s41577-019-0158-z.
Immunity to malaria has been linked to the availability and function of helper CD4 T cells, cytotoxic CD8 T cells and γδ T cells that can respond to both the asymptomatic liver stage and the symptomatic blood stage of Plasmodium sp. infection. These T cell responses are also thought to be modulated by regulatory T cells. However, the precise mechanisms governing the development and function of Plasmodium-specific T cells and their capacity to form tissue-resident and long-lived memory populations are less well understood. The field has arrived at a point where the push for vaccines that exploit T cell-mediated immunity to malaria has made it imperative to define and reconcile the mechanisms that regulate the development and functions of Plasmodium-specific T cells. Here, we review our current understanding of the mechanisms by which T cell subsets orchestrate host resistance to Plasmodium infection on the basis of observational and mechanistic studies in humans, non-human primates and rodent models. We also examine the potential of new experimental strategies and human infection systems to inform a new generation of approaches to harness T cell responses against malaria.
疟疾免疫力与辅助性 CD4 T 细胞、细胞毒性 CD8 T 细胞和 γδ T 细胞的存在和功能有关,这些细胞可以对无症状的肝脏阶段和疟原虫感染的有症状血液阶段做出反应。这些 T 细胞反应也被认为受到调节性 T 细胞的调节。然而,控制疟原虫特异性 T 细胞的发育和功能及其形成组织驻留和长寿记忆群体的能力的精确机制还不太清楚。该领域已经到了一个地步,即推动利用 T 细胞介导的免疫来对抗疟疾的疫苗,因此必须定义和协调调节疟原虫特异性 T 细胞的发育和功能的机制。在这里,我们根据在人类、非人类灵长类动物和啮齿动物模型中的观察性和机制研究,回顾我们目前对 T 细胞亚群协调宿主对疟原虫感染的抵抗机制的理解。我们还研究了新的实验策略和人类感染系统的潜力,以提供一种新的方法来利用 T 细胞对疟疾的反应。