Gravenor M B, McLean A R, Kwiatkowski D
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford.
Parasitology. 1995 Feb;110 ( Pt 2):115-22. doi: 10.1017/s0031182000063861.
Classical studies of non-immune individuals infected with Plasmodium falciparum reveal that the infection may be regulated for long periods at a relatively stable parasite density, despite the enormous growth potential of a parasite that continually replicates within host erythrocytes. This suggests that the parasite population may be controlled by density-dependent mechanisms, and in theory the most obvious of these is competition between parasites for host erythrocytes. Here we evaluate the role of this mechanism in the regulation of parasitaemia, by modelling the basic population interaction between parasites and erythrocytes in a form that allows all the essential parameters to be estimated from clinical data. Our results show that competition cannot account for the total regulation of P. falciparum, but when combined with immune mechanisms it may play a more important role than is generally supposed. Further analysis of the model indicates that in the long term, parasite replication at low parasite densities can contribute significantly to the high degree of anaemia observed in natural infection, a conclusion which is not obvious from simple clinical observation.
对感染恶性疟原虫的非免疫个体的经典研究表明,尽管这种在宿主红细胞内持续复制的寄生虫具有巨大的生长潜力,但感染可能会在相对稳定的寄生虫密度下被长期调节。这表明寄生虫种群可能受密度依赖性机制控制,从理论上讲,其中最明显的是寄生虫之间对宿主红细胞的竞争。在这里,我们通过以一种能够从临床数据中估算所有基本参数的形式,对寄生虫与红细胞之间的基本种群相互作用进行建模,来评估这种机制在调节疟原虫血症中的作用。我们的结果表明,竞争无法解释恶性疟原虫的全部调节情况,但与免疫机制相结合时,它可能发挥比通常认为的更重要的作用。对该模型的进一步分析表明,从长期来看,低寄生虫密度下的寄生虫复制可显著导致自然感染中观察到的高度贫血,这一结论从简单的临床观察中并不明显。