Tebben Kieran, Yirampo Salif, Coulibaly Drissa, Koné Abdoulaye, Laurens Matthew, Stucke Emily, Dembélé Ahmadou, Tolo Youssouf, Traoré Karim, Niangaly Ahmadou, Berry Andrea, Kouriba Bourema, Plowe Christopher, Doumbo Ogobara, Lyke Kirsten, Takala-Harrison Shannon, Thera Mahamadou, Travassos Mark, Serre David
University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Universite des Sciences des Techniques et des Technologies de Bamako.
Res Sq. 2023 Oct 27:rs.3.rs-3487114. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-3487114/v1.
In Bandiagara, Mali, children experience on average two clinical malaria episodes per season. However, even in the same transmission area, the number of uncomplicated symptomatic infections, and their parasitemia, vary dramatically among children. To examine the factors contributing to these variations, we simultaneously characterized the host and parasite gene expression profiles from 136 children with symptomatic falciparum malaria and analyzed the expression of 9,205 human and 2,484 Plasmodium genes. We used gene expression deconvolution to estimate the relative proportion of immune cells and parasite stages in each sample and to adjust the differential gene expression analyses. Parasitemia explained much of the variation in both host and parasite gene expression and revealed that infections with higher parasitemia had more neutrophils and fewer T cells, suggesting parasitemia-dependent neutrophil recruitment and/or T cell extravasation to secondary lymphoid organs. The child's age was also strongly correlated with gene expression variations. Plasmodium falciparum genes associated with age suggested that older children carried more male gametocytes, while host genes associated with age indicated a stronger innate response (through TLR and NLR signaling) in younger children and stronger adaptive immunity (through TCR and BCR signaling) in older children. These analyses highlight the variability in host responses and parasite regulation during P. falciparum symptomatic infections and emphasize the importance of considering the children's age when studying and treating malaria infections.
在马里的班迪亚加拉,儿童每个季节平均经历两次临床疟疾发作。然而,即使在同一传播地区,儿童中无并发症的有症状感染数量及其寄生虫血症也存在巨大差异。为了研究导致这些差异的因素,我们同时对136名有症状恶性疟原虫疟疾患儿的宿主和寄生虫基因表达谱进行了表征,并分析了9205个人类基因和2484个疟原虫基因的表达。我们使用基因表达反卷积来估计每个样本中免疫细胞和寄生虫阶段的相对比例,并调整差异基因表达分析。寄生虫血症解释了宿主和寄生虫基因表达的大部分差异,并表明寄生虫血症较高的感染有更多的中性粒细胞和更少的T细胞,这表明寄生虫血症依赖的中性粒细胞募集和/或T细胞外渗到次级淋巴器官。儿童的年龄也与基因表达差异密切相关。与年龄相关的恶性疟原虫基因表明,年龄较大的儿童携带更多的雄配子体,而与年龄相关的宿主基因表明,年幼儿童有更强的先天反应(通过TLR和NLR信号传导),年龄较大的儿童有更强的适应性免疫(通过TCR和BCR信号传导)。这些分析突出了恶性疟原虫有症状感染期间宿主反应和寄生虫调节的变异性,并强调了在研究和治疗疟疾感染时考虑儿童年龄的重要性。