Increased circulation time of Plasmodium falciparum underlies persistent asymptomatic infection in the dry season

被引:0
|
作者
Carolina M. Andrade
Hannah Fleckenstein
Richard Thomson-Luque
Safiatou Doumbo
Nathalia F. Lima
Carrie Anderson
Julia Hibbert
Christine S. Hopp
Tuan M. Tran
Shanping Li
Moussa Niangaly
Hamidou Cisse
Didier Doumtabe
Jeff Skinner
Dan Sturdevant
Stacy Ricklefs
Kimmo Virtaneva
Muhammad Asghar
Manijeh Vafa Homann
Louise Turner
Joana Martins
Erik L. Allman
Marie-Esther N’Dri
Volker Winkler
Manuel Llinás
Catherine Lavazec
Craig Martens
Anna Färnert
Kassoum Kayentao
Aissata Ongoiba
Thomas Lavstsen
Nuno S. Osório
Thomas D. Otto
Mario Recker
Boubacar Traore
Peter D. Crompton
Silvia Portugal
机构
[1] Heidelberg University Hospital,Center for Infectious Diseases, Parasitology
[2] University of Sciences,Mali International Center of Excellence in Research
[3] Techniques and Technologies of Bamako,Division of Infectious Diseases
[4] Laboratory of Immunogenetics,Department of Medicine Solna
[5] National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,Department of Infectious Diseases
[6] National Institutes of Health,Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Centre for Medical Parasitology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
[7] Indiana University School of Medicine,Department of Infectious Diseases
[8] Indianapolis,Life and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS), School of Medicine
[9] Rocky Mountain Laboratory Research Technologies Section,Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Huck Center for Malaria Research
[10] Genomics Unit,Department of Chemistry
[11] National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,Institute of Infection, Immunity & Inflammation, MVLS
[12] National Institutes of Health,Centre for Mathematics & the Environment
[13] Division of Infectious Diseases,undefined
[14] Karolinska Institutet,undefined
[15] Karolinska University Hospital,undefined
[16] University of Copenhagen,undefined
[17] Copenhagen University Hospital (Rigshospitalet),undefined
[18] University of Minho,undefined
[19] Portugal and ICVS/3B’s –PT Government Associate Laboratory,undefined
[20] The Pennsylvania State University,undefined
[21] Université de Paris,undefined
[22] Institut Cochin,undefined
[23] Institute of Global Health,undefined
[24] Heidelberg University Hospital,undefined
[25] The Pennsylvania State University,undefined
[26] University of Glasgow,undefined
[27] University of Exeter,undefined
[28] Penryn Campus,undefined
[29] German Center for Infection Research (DZIF),undefined
[30] Heidelberg,undefined
[31] Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology,undefined
来源
Nature Medicine | 2020年 / 26卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The dry season is a major challenge for Plasmodium falciparum parasites in many malaria endemic regions, where water availability limits mosquito vectors to only part of the year. How P. falciparum bridges two transmission seasons months apart, without being cleared by the human host or compromising host survival, is poorly understood. Here we show that low levels of P. falciparum parasites persist in the blood of asymptomatic Malian individuals during the 5- to 6-month dry season, rarely causing symptoms and minimally affecting the host immune response. Parasites isolated during the dry season are transcriptionally distinct from those of individuals with febrile malaria in the transmission season, coinciding with longer circulation within each replicative cycle of parasitized erythrocytes without adhering to the vascular endothelium. Low parasite levels during the dry season are not due to impaired replication but rather to increased splenic clearance of longer-circulating infected erythrocytes, which likely maintain parasitemias below clinical and immunological radar. We propose that P. falciparum virulence in areas of seasonal malaria transmission is regulated so that the parasite decreases its endothelial binding capacity, allowing increased splenic clearance and enabling several months of subclinical parasite persistence.
引用
收藏
页码:1929 / 1940
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Frequent and persistent, asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infections in African infants, characterized by multilocus genotyping
    Franks, S
    Koram, KA
    Wagner, GE
    Tetteh, K
    McGuinness, D
    Wheeler, JG
    Nkrumah, F
    Ranford-Cartwright, L
    Riley, EM
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2001, 183 (05): : 796 - 804
  • [32] Clustering of asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infection and the effectiveness of targeted malaria control measures
    Shaffer, Jeffrey G.
    Toure, Mahamoudou B.
    Sogoba, Nafomon
    Doumbia, Seydou O.
    Gomis, Jules F.
    Ndiaye, Mouhamadou
    Ndiaye, Daouda
    Diarra, Ayouba
    Abubakar, Ismaela
    Ahmad, Abdullahi
    Affara, Muna
    Nwakanma, Davis
    Lukowski, Mary
    Welty, James C.
    Mather, Frances J.
    Keating, Joseph
    Krogstad, Donald J.
    MALARIA JOURNAL, 2020, 19 (01)
  • [33] Characterization of T cell activation and regulation in children with asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infection
    Augustina Frimpong
    Kwadwo Asamoah Kusi
    Bernard Tornyigah
    Michael Fokuo Ofori
    Wilfred Ndifon
    Malaria Journal, 17
  • [34] Characterization of T cell activation and regulation in children with asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infection
    Frimpong, Augustina
    Kusi, Kwadwo Asamoah
    Tornyigah, Bernard
    Ofori, Michael Fokuo
    Ndifon, Wilfred
    MALARIA JOURNAL, 2018, 17
  • [35] Clustering of asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infection and the effectiveness of targeted malaria control measures
    Jeffrey G. Shaffer
    Mahamoudou B. Touré
    Nafomon Sogoba
    Seydou O. Doumbia
    Jules F. Gomis
    Mouhamadou Ndiaye
    Daouda Ndiaye
    Ayouba Diarra
    Ismaela Abubakar
    Abdullahi Ahmad
    Muna Affara
    Davis Nwakanma
    Mary Lukowski
    James C. Welty
    Frances J. Mather
    Joseph Keating
    Donald J. Krogstad
    Malaria Journal, 19
  • [36] Prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection in rainy season, Artibonite Valley, Haiti, 2006
    Eisele, Thomas P.
    Keating, Joseph
    Bennett, Adam
    Londono, Berlin
    Johnson, Dawn
    Lafontant, Christina
    Krogstad, Donald J.
    EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2007, 13 (10) : 1494 - 1496
  • [37] Persistent Endothelial Activation and Inflammation After Plasmodium falciparum Infection in Malawian Children
    Moxon, Christopher A.
    Chisala, Ngawina V.
    Wassmer, Samuel C.
    Taylor, Terrie E.
    Seydel, Karl B.
    Molyneux, Malcolm E.
    Faragher, Brian
    Kennedy, Neil
    Toh, Cheng-Hock
    Craig, Alister G.
    Heyderman, Robert S.
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2014, 209 (04): : 610 - 615
  • [38] Dynamics in multiplicity of Plasmodium falciparum infection among children with asymptomatic malaria in central Ghana
    Akua Kyerewaa Botwe
    Kwaku Poku Asante
    George Adjei
    Samuel Assafuah
    David Dosoo
    Seth Owusu-Agyei
    BMC Genetics, 18
  • [39] Relation between Plasmodium falciparum asymptomatic infection and malaria attacks in a cohort of Senegalese children
    Le Port, Agnes
    Cot, Michel
    Etard, Jean-Francois
    Gaye, Oumar
    Migot-Nabias, Florence
    Garcia, Andre
    MALARIA JOURNAL, 2008, 7 (1)
  • [40] Relation between Plasmodium falciparum asymptomatic infection and malaria attacks in a cohort of Senegalese children
    Agnès Le Port
    Michel Cot
    Jean-François Etard
    Oumar Gaye
    Florence Migot-Nabias
    André Garcia
    Malaria Journal, 7