Cargando…

Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi

BACKGROUND: Kra monkeys (Macaca fascicularis), a natural host of Plasmodium knowlesi, control parasitaemia caused by this parasite species and escape death without treatment. Knowledge of the disease progression and resilience in kra monkeys will aid the effective use of this species to study mechan...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Peterson, Mariko S., Joyner, Chester J., Brady, Jessica A., Wood, Jennifer S., Cabrera-Mora, Monica, Saney, Celia L., Fonseca, Luis L., Cheng, Wayne T., Jiang, Jianlin, Lapp, Stacey A., Soderberg, Stephanie R., Nural, Mustafa V., Humphrey, Jay C., Hankus, Allison, Machiah, Deepa, Karpuzoglu, Ebru, DeBarry, Jeremy D., Tirouvanziam, Rabindra, Kissinger, Jessica C., Moreno, Alberto, Gumber, Sanjeev, Voit, Eberhard O., Gutiérrez, Juan B., Cordy, Regina Joice, Galinski, Mary R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8719393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34969401
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-021-03925-6
_version_ 1784624927839617024
author Peterson, Mariko S.
Joyner, Chester J.
Brady, Jessica A.
Wood, Jennifer S.
Cabrera-Mora, Monica
Saney, Celia L.
Fonseca, Luis L.
Cheng, Wayne T.
Jiang, Jianlin
Lapp, Stacey A.
Soderberg, Stephanie R.
Nural, Mustafa V.
Humphrey, Jay C.
Hankus, Allison
Machiah, Deepa
Karpuzoglu, Ebru
DeBarry, Jeremy D.
Tirouvanziam, Rabindra
Kissinger, Jessica C.
Moreno, Alberto
Gumber, Sanjeev
Voit, Eberhard O.
Gutiérrez, Juan B.
Cordy, Regina Joice
Galinski, Mary R.
author_facet Peterson, Mariko S.
Joyner, Chester J.
Brady, Jessica A.
Wood, Jennifer S.
Cabrera-Mora, Monica
Saney, Celia L.
Fonseca, Luis L.
Cheng, Wayne T.
Jiang, Jianlin
Lapp, Stacey A.
Soderberg, Stephanie R.
Nural, Mustafa V.
Humphrey, Jay C.
Hankus, Allison
Machiah, Deepa
Karpuzoglu, Ebru
DeBarry, Jeremy D.
Tirouvanziam, Rabindra
Kissinger, Jessica C.
Moreno, Alberto
Gumber, Sanjeev
Voit, Eberhard O.
Gutiérrez, Juan B.
Cordy, Regina Joice
Galinski, Mary R.
author_sort Peterson, Mariko S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Kra monkeys (Macaca fascicularis), a natural host of Plasmodium knowlesi, control parasitaemia caused by this parasite species and escape death without treatment. Knowledge of the disease progression and resilience in kra monkeys will aid the effective use of this species to study mechanisms of resilience to malaria. This longitudinal study aimed to define clinical, physiological and pathological changes in kra monkeys infected with P. knowlesi, which could explain their resilient phenotype. METHODS: Kra monkeys (n = 15, male, young adults) were infected intravenously with cryopreserved P. knowlesi sporozoites and the resulting parasitaemias were monitored daily. Complete blood counts, reticulocyte counts, blood chemistry and physiological telemetry data (n = 7) were acquired as described prior to infection to establish baseline values and then daily after inoculation for up to 50 days. Bone marrow aspirates, plasma samples, and 22 tissue samples were collected at specific time points to evaluate longitudinal clinical, physiological and pathological effects of P. knowlesi infections during acute and chronic infections. RESULTS: As expected, the kra monkeys controlled acute infections and remained with low-level, persistent parasitaemias without anti-malarial intervention. Unexpectedly, early in the infection, fevers developed, which ultimately returned to baseline, as well as mild to moderate thrombocytopenia, and moderate to severe anaemia. Mathematical modelling and the reticulocyte production index indicated that the anaemia was largely due to the removal of uninfected erythrocytes and not impaired production of erythrocytes. Mild tissue damage was observed, and tissue parasite load was associated with tissue damage even though parasite accumulation in the tissues was generally low. CONCLUSIONS: Kra monkeys experimentally infected with P. knowlesi sporozoites presented with multiple clinical signs of malaria that varied in severity among individuals. Overall, the animals shared common mechanisms of resilience characterized by controlling parasitaemia 3–5 days after patency, and controlling fever, coupled with physiological and bone marrow responses to compensate for anaemia. Together, these responses likely minimized tissue damage while supporting the establishment of chronic infections, which may be important for transmission in natural endemic settings. These results provide new foundational insights into malaria pathogenesis and resilience in kra monkeys, which may improve understanding of human infections. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12936-021-03925-6.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8719393
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87193932022-01-05 Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi Peterson, Mariko S. Joyner, Chester J. Brady, Jessica A. Wood, Jennifer S. Cabrera-Mora, Monica Saney, Celia L. Fonseca, Luis L. Cheng, Wayne T. Jiang, Jianlin Lapp, Stacey A. Soderberg, Stephanie R. Nural, Mustafa V. Humphrey, Jay C. Hankus, Allison Machiah, Deepa Karpuzoglu, Ebru DeBarry, Jeremy D. Tirouvanziam, Rabindra Kissinger, Jessica C. Moreno, Alberto Gumber, Sanjeev Voit, Eberhard O. Gutiérrez, Juan B. Cordy, Regina Joice Galinski, Mary R. Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Kra monkeys (Macaca fascicularis), a natural host of Plasmodium knowlesi, control parasitaemia caused by this parasite species and escape death without treatment. Knowledge of the disease progression and resilience in kra monkeys will aid the effective use of this species to study mechanisms of resilience to malaria. This longitudinal study aimed to define clinical, physiological and pathological changes in kra monkeys infected with P. knowlesi, which could explain their resilient phenotype. METHODS: Kra monkeys (n = 15, male, young adults) were infected intravenously with cryopreserved P. knowlesi sporozoites and the resulting parasitaemias were monitored daily. Complete blood counts, reticulocyte counts, blood chemistry and physiological telemetry data (n = 7) were acquired as described prior to infection to establish baseline values and then daily after inoculation for up to 50 days. Bone marrow aspirates, plasma samples, and 22 tissue samples were collected at specific time points to evaluate longitudinal clinical, physiological and pathological effects of P. knowlesi infections during acute and chronic infections. RESULTS: As expected, the kra monkeys controlled acute infections and remained with low-level, persistent parasitaemias without anti-malarial intervention. Unexpectedly, early in the infection, fevers developed, which ultimately returned to baseline, as well as mild to moderate thrombocytopenia, and moderate to severe anaemia. Mathematical modelling and the reticulocyte production index indicated that the anaemia was largely due to the removal of uninfected erythrocytes and not impaired production of erythrocytes. Mild tissue damage was observed, and tissue parasite load was associated with tissue damage even though parasite accumulation in the tissues was generally low. CONCLUSIONS: Kra monkeys experimentally infected with P. knowlesi sporozoites presented with multiple clinical signs of malaria that varied in severity among individuals. Overall, the animals shared common mechanisms of resilience characterized by controlling parasitaemia 3–5 days after patency, and controlling fever, coupled with physiological and bone marrow responses to compensate for anaemia. Together, these responses likely minimized tissue damage while supporting the establishment of chronic infections, which may be important for transmission in natural endemic settings. These results provide new foundational insights into malaria pathogenesis and resilience in kra monkeys, which may improve understanding of human infections. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12936-021-03925-6. BioMed Central 2021-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8719393/ /pubmed/34969401 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-021-03925-6 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.
spellingShingle Research
Peterson, Mariko S.
Joyner, Chester J.
Brady, Jessica A.
Wood, Jennifer S.
Cabrera-Mora, Monica
Saney, Celia L.
Fonseca, Luis L.
Cheng, Wayne T.
Jiang, Jianlin
Lapp, Stacey A.
Soderberg, Stephanie R.
Nural, Mustafa V.
Humphrey, Jay C.
Hankus, Allison
Machiah, Deepa
Karpuzoglu, Ebru
DeBarry, Jeremy D.
Tirouvanziam, Rabindra
Kissinger, Jessica C.
Moreno, Alberto
Gumber, Sanjeev
Voit, Eberhard O.
Gutiérrez, Juan B.
Cordy, Regina Joice
Galinski, Mary R.
Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi
title Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi
title_full Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi
title_fullStr Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi
title_full_unstemmed Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi
title_short Clinical recovery of Macaca fascicularis infected with Plasmodium knowlesi
title_sort clinical recovery of macaca fascicularis infected with plasmodium knowlesi
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8719393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34969401
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-021-03925-6
work_keys_str_mv AT petersonmarikos clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT joynerchesterj clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT bradyjessicaa clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT woodjennifers clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT cabreramoramonica clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT saneycelial clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT fonsecaluisl clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT chengwaynet clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT jiangjianlin clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT lappstaceya clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT soderbergstephanier clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT nuralmustafav clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT humphreyjayc clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT hankusallison clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT machiahdeepa clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT karpuzogluebru clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT debarryjeremyd clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT tirouvanziamrabindra clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT kissingerjessicac clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT morenoalberto clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT gumbersanjeev clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT voiteberhardo clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT gutierrezjuanb clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT cordyreginajoice clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi
AT galinskimaryr clinicalrecoveryofmacacafascicularisinfectedwithplasmodiumknowlesi