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Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria

Cerebral malaria (CM) is the most severe manifestation of human malaria yet is still poorly understood. Mouse models have been developed to address the subject. However, their relevance to mimic human pathogenesis is largely debated. Here we study an alternative cerebral malaria model with an experi...

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Autores principales: Keita Alassane, Sokhna, Nicolau-Travers, Marie-Laure, Menard, Sandie, Andreoletti, Olivier, Cambus, Jean-Pierre, Gaudre, Noémie, Wlodarczyk, Myriam, Blanchard, Nicolas, Berry, Antoine, Abbes, Sarah, Colongo, David, Faye, Babacar, Augereau, Jean-Michel, Lacroux, Caroline, Iriart, Xavier, Benoit-Vical, Françoise
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5524346/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28742109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181300
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author Keita Alassane, Sokhna
Nicolau-Travers, Marie-Laure
Menard, Sandie
Andreoletti, Olivier
Cambus, Jean-Pierre
Gaudre, Noémie
Wlodarczyk, Myriam
Blanchard, Nicolas
Berry, Antoine
Abbes, Sarah
Colongo, David
Faye, Babacar
Augereau, Jean-Michel
Lacroux, Caroline
Iriart, Xavier
Benoit-Vical, Françoise
author_facet Keita Alassane, Sokhna
Nicolau-Travers, Marie-Laure
Menard, Sandie
Andreoletti, Olivier
Cambus, Jean-Pierre
Gaudre, Noémie
Wlodarczyk, Myriam
Blanchard, Nicolas
Berry, Antoine
Abbes, Sarah
Colongo, David
Faye, Babacar
Augereau, Jean-Michel
Lacroux, Caroline
Iriart, Xavier
Benoit-Vical, Françoise
author_sort Keita Alassane, Sokhna
collection PubMed
description Cerebral malaria (CM) is the most severe manifestation of human malaria yet is still poorly understood. Mouse models have been developed to address the subject. However, their relevance to mimic human pathogenesis is largely debated. Here we study an alternative cerebral malaria model with an experimental Plasmodium berghei Keyberg 173 (K173) infection in Sprague Dawley rats. As in Human, not all infected subjects showed cerebral malaria, with 45% of the rats exhibiting Experimental Cerebral Malaria (ECM) symptoms while the majority (55%) of the remaining rats developed severe anemia and hyperparasitemia (NoECM). These results allow, within the same population, a comparison of the noxious effects of the infection between ECM and severe malaria without ECM. Among the ECM rats, 77.8% died between day 5 and day 12 post-infection, while the remaining rats were spontaneously cured of neurological signs within 24–48 hours. The clinical ECM signs observed were paresis quickly evolving to limb paralysis, global paralysis associated with respiratory distress, and coma. The red blood cell (RBC) count remained normal but a drastic decrease of platelet count and an increase of white blood cell numbers were noted. ECM rats also showed a decrease of glucose and total CO(2) levels and an increase of creatinine levels compared to control rats or rats with no ECM. Assessment of the blood-brain barrier revealed loss of integrity, and interestingly histopathological analysis highlighted cyto-adherence and sequestration of infected RBCs in brain vessels from ECM rats only. Overall, this ECM rat model showed numerous clinical and histopathological features similar to Human CM and appears to be a promising model to achieve further understanding the CM pathophysiology in Humans and to evaluate the activity of specific antimalarial drugs in avoiding/limiting cerebral damages from malaria.
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spelling pubmed-55243462017-08-07 Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria Keita Alassane, Sokhna Nicolau-Travers, Marie-Laure Menard, Sandie Andreoletti, Olivier Cambus, Jean-Pierre Gaudre, Noémie Wlodarczyk, Myriam Blanchard, Nicolas Berry, Antoine Abbes, Sarah Colongo, David Faye, Babacar Augereau, Jean-Michel Lacroux, Caroline Iriart, Xavier Benoit-Vical, Françoise PLoS One Research Article Cerebral malaria (CM) is the most severe manifestation of human malaria yet is still poorly understood. Mouse models have been developed to address the subject. However, their relevance to mimic human pathogenesis is largely debated. Here we study an alternative cerebral malaria model with an experimental Plasmodium berghei Keyberg 173 (K173) infection in Sprague Dawley rats. As in Human, not all infected subjects showed cerebral malaria, with 45% of the rats exhibiting Experimental Cerebral Malaria (ECM) symptoms while the majority (55%) of the remaining rats developed severe anemia and hyperparasitemia (NoECM). These results allow, within the same population, a comparison of the noxious effects of the infection between ECM and severe malaria without ECM. Among the ECM rats, 77.8% died between day 5 and day 12 post-infection, while the remaining rats were spontaneously cured of neurological signs within 24–48 hours. The clinical ECM signs observed were paresis quickly evolving to limb paralysis, global paralysis associated with respiratory distress, and coma. The red blood cell (RBC) count remained normal but a drastic decrease of platelet count and an increase of white blood cell numbers were noted. ECM rats also showed a decrease of glucose and total CO(2) levels and an increase of creatinine levels compared to control rats or rats with no ECM. Assessment of the blood-brain barrier revealed loss of integrity, and interestingly histopathological analysis highlighted cyto-adherence and sequestration of infected RBCs in brain vessels from ECM rats only. Overall, this ECM rat model showed numerous clinical and histopathological features similar to Human CM and appears to be a promising model to achieve further understanding the CM pathophysiology in Humans and to evaluate the activity of specific antimalarial drugs in avoiding/limiting cerebral damages from malaria. Public Library of Science 2017-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC5524346/ /pubmed/28742109 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181300 Text en © 2017 Keita Alassane 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Keita Alassane, Sokhna
Nicolau-Travers, Marie-Laure
Menard, Sandie
Andreoletti, Olivier
Cambus, Jean-Pierre
Gaudre, Noémie
Wlodarczyk, Myriam
Blanchard, Nicolas
Berry, Antoine
Abbes, Sarah
Colongo, David
Faye, Babacar
Augereau, Jean-Michel
Lacroux, Caroline
Iriart, Xavier
Benoit-Vical, Françoise
Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
title Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
title_full Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
title_fullStr Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
title_full_unstemmed Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
title_short Young Sprague Dawley rats infected by Plasmodium berghei: A relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
title_sort young sprague dawley rats infected by plasmodium berghei: a relevant experimental model to study cerebral malaria
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5524346/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28742109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181300
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