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Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation

There is considerable debate as to the nature of the primary parasite-derived moieties that activate innate pro-inflammatory responses during malaria infection. Microparticles (MPs), which are produced by numerous cell types following vesiculation of the cellular membrane as a consequence of cell de...

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Autores principales: Couper, Kevin N., Barnes, Tom, Hafalla, Julius C. R., Combes, Valery, Ryffel, Bernhard, Secher, Thomas, Grau, Georges E., Riley, Eleanor M., de Souza, J. Brian
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2813278/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126448
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000744
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author Couper, Kevin N.
Barnes, Tom
Hafalla, Julius C. R.
Combes, Valery
Ryffel, Bernhard
Secher, Thomas
Grau, Georges E.
Riley, Eleanor M.
de Souza, J. Brian
author_facet Couper, Kevin N.
Barnes, Tom
Hafalla, Julius C. R.
Combes, Valery
Ryffel, Bernhard
Secher, Thomas
Grau, Georges E.
Riley, Eleanor M.
de Souza, J. Brian
author_sort Couper, Kevin N.
collection PubMed
description There is considerable debate as to the nature of the primary parasite-derived moieties that activate innate pro-inflammatory responses during malaria infection. Microparticles (MPs), which are produced by numerous cell types following vesiculation of the cellular membrane as a consequence of cell death or immune-activation, exert strong pro-inflammatory activity in other disease states. Here we demonstrate that MPs, derived from the plasma of malaria infected mice, but not naive mice, induce potent activation of macrophages in vitro as measured by CD40 up-regulation and TNF production. In vitro, these MPs induced significantly higher levels of macrophage activation than intact infected red blood cells. Immunofluorescence staining revealed that MPs contained significant amounts of parasite material indicating that they are derived primarily from infected red blood cells rather than platelets or endothelial cells. MP driven macrophage activation was completely abolished in the absence of MyD88 and TLR-4 signalling. Similar levels of immunogenic MPs were produced in WT and in TNF(−/−), IFN-γ(−/−), IL-12(−/−) and RAG-1(−/−) malaria-infected mice, but were not produced in mice injected with LPS, showing that inflammation is not required for the production of MPs during malaria infection. This study therefore establishes parasitized red blood cell-derived MPs as a major inducer of systemic inflammation during malaria infection, raising important questions about their role in severe disease and in the generation of adaptive immune responses.
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spelling pubmed-28132782010-02-03 Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation Couper, Kevin N. Barnes, Tom Hafalla, Julius C. R. Combes, Valery Ryffel, Bernhard Secher, Thomas Grau, Georges E. Riley, Eleanor M. de Souza, J. Brian PLoS Pathog Research Article There is considerable debate as to the nature of the primary parasite-derived moieties that activate innate pro-inflammatory responses during malaria infection. Microparticles (MPs), which are produced by numerous cell types following vesiculation of the cellular membrane as a consequence of cell death or immune-activation, exert strong pro-inflammatory activity in other disease states. Here we demonstrate that MPs, derived from the plasma of malaria infected mice, but not naive mice, induce potent activation of macrophages in vitro as measured by CD40 up-regulation and TNF production. In vitro, these MPs induced significantly higher levels of macrophage activation than intact infected red blood cells. Immunofluorescence staining revealed that MPs contained significant amounts of parasite material indicating that they are derived primarily from infected red blood cells rather than platelets or endothelial cells. MP driven macrophage activation was completely abolished in the absence of MyD88 and TLR-4 signalling. Similar levels of immunogenic MPs were produced in WT and in TNF(−/−), IFN-γ(−/−), IL-12(−/−) and RAG-1(−/−) malaria-infected mice, but were not produced in mice injected with LPS, showing that inflammation is not required for the production of MPs during malaria infection. This study therefore establishes parasitized red blood cell-derived MPs as a major inducer of systemic inflammation during malaria infection, raising important questions about their role in severe disease and in the generation of adaptive immune responses. Public Library of Science 2010-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2813278/ /pubmed/20126448 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000744 Text en Couper et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Couper, Kevin N.
Barnes, Tom
Hafalla, Julius C. R.
Combes, Valery
Ryffel, Bernhard
Secher, Thomas
Grau, Georges E.
Riley, Eleanor M.
de Souza, J. Brian
Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation
title Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation
title_full Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation
title_fullStr Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation
title_full_unstemmed Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation
title_short Parasite-Derived Plasma Microparticles Contribute Significantly to Malaria Infection-Induced Inflammation through Potent Macrophage Stimulation
title_sort parasite-derived plasma microparticles contribute significantly to malaria infection-induced inflammation through potent macrophage stimulation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2813278/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126448
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000744
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