Kaul D K, Nagel R L, Llena J F, Shear H L
Division of Hematology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1994 Apr;50(4):512-21. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1994.50.512.
To understand the microcirculatory events during cerebral malaria, we have studied the lethal strain of rodent Plasmodia, Plasmodium yoelii 17XL, originally described by Yoeli and Hargreaves in 1974. The virulence of P. yoelii 17XL is caused by intravascular sequestration of infected red blood cells (IRBCs), especially in the brain vessels and capillaries. This mouse model resembles human P. falciparum infection more closely than P. berghei ANKA infection since it shows little, if any, inflammation of the brain. In vivo microcirculatory studies on cytoadherence of IRBCs were performed using the cremaster muscle preparation, which is an easily accessible vasculature for intravital observations. Ex vivo assay of cytoadherence was carried out in the artificially perfused mesocecum preparation of the rat. The results in either preparation demonstrated cytoadherence of IRBCs that was restricted to postcapillary venules. Furthermore, the in vivo measurements showed the prevalence of cytoadherence in small-diameter (< 40 microns) venules in accordance with the local wall shear rates. The parasitized animals demonstrated significantly reduced red blood cell velocities and wall shear rates in the small-diameter postcapillary venules of the cremaster. The relationship between cytoadherence and venular wall shear rates was also reflected in the inverse correlation between the number of adhered cells and the venular diameter in the ex vivo mesocecum preparation. In the ex vivo preparation, cytoadherence of IRBCs was accompanied by a higher peripheral resistance. Transmission electron microscopy of the cremaster muscle and brain tissues showed a tight association of IRBCs with the endothelium of small venules. These observations demonstrate that cytoadherence of P. yoelii 17XL-infected mouse red blood cells is very similar to that of P. falciparum-infected cells. Thus, this model should allow a detailed analysis of the molecular mechanisms involved in the generation of cerebral malaria by cytoadherence of the infected red blood cells to the vascular endothelium.
为了解脑型疟疾期间的微循环事件,我们研究了啮齿类疟原虫的致死株——约氏疟原虫17XL,该毒株最初由约利和哈格里夫斯于1974年描述。约氏疟原虫17XL的毒力是由受感染红细胞(IRBCs)在血管内滞留引起的,尤其是在脑血管和毛细血管中。与伯氏疟原虫ANKA感染相比,该小鼠模型更类似于人类恶性疟原虫感染,因为它几乎没有脑部炎症(如果有炎症也是极少的)。使用提睾肌制备物对IRBCs的细胞黏附进行了体内微循环研究,提睾肌是一种便于进行活体观察的脉管系统。在大鼠人工灌注的中结肠制备物中进行了细胞黏附的体外测定。两种制备物的结果均表明,IRBCs的细胞黏附仅限于毛细血管后微静脉。此外,体内测量结果显示,根据局部壁面剪切速率,小直径(<40微米)微静脉中细胞黏附的发生率较高。感染疟原虫的动物在提睾肌小直径毛细血管后微静脉中的红细胞速度和壁面剪切速率显著降低。细胞黏附与微静脉壁面剪切速率之间的关系也反映在体外中结肠制备物中黏附细胞数量与微静脉直径之间的负相关中。在体外制备物中,IRBCs的细胞黏附伴随着更高的外周阻力。提睾肌和脑组织的透射电子显微镜检查显示,IRBCs与小静脉内皮紧密相连。这些观察结果表明,约氏疟原虫17XL感染的小鼠红细胞的细胞黏附与恶性疟原虫感染的细胞非常相似。因此,该模型应有助于详细分析感染的红细胞与血管内皮细胞黏附所涉及的分子机制,这些机制参与了脑型疟疾的发生。