The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Department of Medical Biology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Front Immunol. 2019 Apr 2;10:559. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00559. eCollection 2019.
A single exposure to many viral and bacterial pathogens typically induces life-long immunity, however, the development of the protective immunity to parasites is strikingly less efficient and achieves only partial protection, with adults residing in endemic areas often experiencing asymptomatic infections. Although naturally acquired immunity to malaria requires both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses, antibodies govern the control of malarial disease caused by the blood-stage form of the parasites. A large body of epidemiological evidence described that antibodies to antigens are inefficiently generated and rapidly lost without continued parasite exposure, suggesting that malaria is accompanied by defects in the development of immunological B cell memory. This topic has been of focus of recent studies of malaria infection in humans and mice. This review examines the main findings to date on the processes that modulate the acquisition of memory B cell responses to malaria, and highlights the importance of closing outstanding gaps of knowledge in the field for the rational design of next generation therapeutics against malaria.
单次暴露于多种病毒和细菌病原体通常会诱导终身免疫,然而,对寄生虫的保护性免疫的发展效率却惊人地低,只能实现部分保护,在地方性流行地区的成年人经常经历无症状感染。尽管疟疾的天然获得性免疫需要细胞介导和体液免疫反应,但抗体控制由寄生虫血期形式引起的疟疾疾病。大量流行病学证据表明,如果没有持续的寄生虫暴露,针对抗原的抗体生成效率低下且迅速丧失,这表明疟疾伴随着免疫 B 细胞记忆发育缺陷。这个主题一直是人类和小鼠疟疾感染的近期研究的重点。本综述检查了迄今为止关于调节获得针对疟疾的记忆 B 细胞反应的过程的主要发现,并强调了为合理设计针对疟疾的下一代治疗方法而缩小该领域现有知识空白的重要性。