Demirci Mehmet, Yıldız Zeyrek Fadile
Kırklareli University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Microbiology, Kırklareli, Türkiye.
Harran University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Microbiology, Şanlıurfa, Türkiye.
Mikrobiyol Bul. 2022 Oct;56(4):763-775. doi: 10.5578/mb.20229614.
Malaria is still considered an important public health problem among parasitic diseases all over the world and poses a significant risk for half of the world's population. In recent years, both the human and animal experimental models pointed out that Plasmodium species that cause malaria changes the composition of the human gut microbiota and particularly certain gut bacterial communities are associated with the risk and severity of malaria infection. These data take the host-microbiota relationship to the next level and enable the scientific world to focus on the interaction in the host-microbiota-pathogen triangle. Plasmodium-gut microbiota interaction has attracted attention in the severe malaria infection, whose immunopathogenesis mechanism is still unknown and can show severe clinical symptoms from person to person. Studies on Plasmodium-gut microbiota are limited in the literature. Although it is difficult to compare the data due to the differences in method and purpose in the studies, in the case of Plasmodium infection, a decrease abundances of Bacteroidetes and Verrucomicrobia phyla and an increase abundances of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria phyla were observed in the gut microbiota. It has been noticed that Plasmodium can cause changes in the gut microbiota of the host and can differentiate the host immune response, especially by changing the short-chain fatty acids producing gut bacteria. The human immune response targets different stages in the complex life cycle of Plasmodium. The major immune response elements in the preerythrocytic and erythrocytic stages of Plasmodium are CD8+ T cells and antibodies, respectively. Germinal center B cells in the spleen have critical roles for the longevity of specific antibodies required in Plasmodium infections. Gut bacteria can influence germinal center B cell response in mice via CD40 ligand. Genes causing differentiation of Th17 cells are also upregulated in the late immune response to Plasmodium, and differentiation of Th17 cells has been found to be associated with changes in Sutterella and Parabacteroides distasonis in the gut microbiota. Data are currently limited to reveal causesconsequences relationships but the correlation of host cytokine responses due to malaria pathogenesis with the gut microbiota profile draws attention to the relationship. Although the changes in the human gut microbiota is examined in this review, it should be kept in mind that the microbiota in the midgut microbiota of Anopheles can have a negative effect on the physiology of Plasmodium. It was thought that the contribution of these differentiations in the host gut microbiota to the immune response and the host-microbiota-pathogen interaction, especially in severe malaria infections whose immunopathogenesis mechanism is not clear, should be investigated with standardized and comprehensive clinical studies. In this review article, human or animal studies on the interaction of Plasmodium-gut microbiota have been discussed.
疟疾在全球所有寄生虫病中仍被视为一个重要的公共卫生问题,对世界一半人口构成重大风险。近年来,人类和动物实验模型均指出,引起疟疾的疟原虫物种会改变人类肠道微生物群的组成,特别是某些肠道细菌群落与疟疾感染的风险和严重程度相关。这些数据将宿主 - 微生物群的关系提升到了一个新的层面,使科学界能够专注于宿主 - 微生物群 - 病原体三角关系中的相互作用。疟原虫与肠道微生物群的相互作用在严重疟疾感染中已引起关注,其免疫发病机制尚不清楚,且个体间临床症状差异较大。文献中关于疟原虫与肠道微生物群的研究有限。尽管由于研究方法和目的不同难以比较数据,但在疟原虫感染的情况下,观察到肠道微生物群中拟杆菌门和疣微菌门的丰度降低,厚壁菌门和变形菌门的丰度增加。人们已经注意到,疟原虫可导致宿主肠道微生物群发生变化,并可使宿主免疫反应产生差异,特别是通过改变产生短链脂肪酸的肠道细菌。人类免疫反应针对疟原虫复杂生命周期中的不同阶段。疟原虫红细胞前期和红细胞期的主要免疫反应元件分别是CD8 + T细胞和抗体。脾脏中的生发中心B细胞对疟原虫感染所需特异性抗体的持久性起关键作用。肠道细菌可通过CD40配体影响小鼠生发中心B细胞反应。在对疟原虫的晚期免疫反应中,导致Th17细胞分化的基因也会上调,并且已发现Th17细胞的分化与肠道微生物群中萨特氏菌属和多形拟杆菌的变化有关。目前的数据仅限于揭示因果关系,但疟疾发病机制引起的宿主细胞因子反应与肠道微生物群谱之间的相关性值得关注。尽管本综述研究了人类肠道微生物群的变化,但应牢记按蚊中肠微生物群可能对疟原虫的生理产生负面影响。人们认为,尤其是在免疫发病机制尚不清楚的严重疟疾感染中,宿主肠道微生物群的这些差异对免疫反应以及宿主 - 微生物群 - 病原体相互作用的贡献,应该通过标准化和全面的临床研究进行调查。在这篇综述文章中,讨论了关于疟原虫与肠道微生物群相互作用的人类或动物研究。