Comino Garcia Muñoz Alicia, Marfouk Oumaima, Michel Constance P, Varlet Isabelle, Royer Emilien, Perles-Barbacaru Teodora-Adriana, Viola Angèle
Faculté des Sciences Médicales et Paramédicales la Timone, Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS, Centre de Résonance Magnétique Biologique et Médicale, UMR 7339, Marseille, France.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 18;20(8):e0328693. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0328693. eCollection 2025.
Cerebral malaria (CM), a potentially lethal neurological complication of the infection by Plasmodium falciparum, affects mostly the pediatric population under 5 years old in sub-Saharan Africa. This clinical syndrome is characterized on anatomical brain imaging by microhemorrhages, parenchymal lesions and brain edema. Epidemiological studies based on sex or gender are rare and do not allow to draw any conclusions on a possible sexual dimorphism in CM. However, some regional data and genetic studies suggest a possible influence of sex on the susceptibility to this clinical syndrome and complications in surviving patients. The murine model of experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) in mice has proven to be a useful and reliable tool to study the pathogenic mechanisms and possible therapeutical approaches for CM. In this study, we used in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess the differences linked to sex in the development of experimental CM in C57BL/6J mice infected with the murine parasite Plasmodium berghei ANKA. Our volumetric analysis reveals sex-dependent differences in brain swelling and lesion distribution, particularly microhemorrhages, as well as a regionalization of brain edema in ECM, with swelling-prone structures common to both sexes like the cortex and the pons, and others which show sex-specific alterations like the inferior and superior colliculi or the midbrain. Together, our results indicate that ECM is more severe in male than in female C57Bl/6J mice.
脑型疟疾(CM)是由恶性疟原虫感染引起的一种潜在致命性神经并发症,主要影响撒哈拉以南非洲5岁以下的儿童人群。这种临床综合征在脑部解剖成像上的特征为微出血、实质病变和脑水肿。基于性别进行的流行病学研究很少,无法就CM中可能存在的性别二态性得出任何结论。然而,一些区域数据和基因研究表明,性别可能对存活患者对这种临床综合征及其并发症的易感性产生影响。小鼠实验性脑型疟疾(ECM)模型已被证明是研究CM致病机制和可能治疗方法的有用且可靠的工具。在本研究中,我们使用体内磁共振成像(MRI)来评估感染鼠疟原虫伯氏疟原虫ANKA的C57BL/6J小鼠实验性CM发展过程中与性别相关的差异。我们的体积分析揭示了脑肿胀和病变分布(特别是微出血)中存在性别依赖性差异,以及ECM中脑水肿的区域化,两性都有易肿胀的结构,如皮质和脑桥,还有一些表现出性别特异性改变的结构,如下丘和上丘或中脑。总之,我们的结果表明,雄性C57Bl/6J小鼠的ECM比雌性更严重。