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‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children

Recent malaria is associated with an increased risk of systemic bacterial infection. The aetiology of this association is unclear but malaria-related haemolysis may be one contributory factor. To characterise the physiological consequences of persistent and recently resolved malaria infections and a...

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Autores principales: Mooney, Jason P., DonVito, Sophia M., Jahateh, Maimuna, Bittaye, Haddy, Keith, Marianne, Galloway, Lauren J., Ndow, Mortala, Cunnington, Aubrey J., D’Alessandro, Umberto, Bottomley, Christian, Riley, Eleanor M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8831762/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35154104
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.780525
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author Mooney, Jason P.
DonVito, Sophia M.
Jahateh, Maimuna
Bittaye, Haddy
Keith, Marianne
Galloway, Lauren J.
Ndow, Mortala
Cunnington, Aubrey J.
D’Alessandro, Umberto
Bottomley, Christian
Riley, Eleanor M.
author_facet Mooney, Jason P.
DonVito, Sophia M.
Jahateh, Maimuna
Bittaye, Haddy
Keith, Marianne
Galloway, Lauren J.
Ndow, Mortala
Cunnington, Aubrey J.
D’Alessandro, Umberto
Bottomley, Christian
Riley, Eleanor M.
author_sort Mooney, Jason P.
collection PubMed
description Recent malaria is associated with an increased risk of systemic bacterial infection. The aetiology of this association is unclear but malaria-related haemolysis may be one contributory factor. To characterise the physiological consequences of persistent and recently resolved malaria infections and associated haemolysis, 1650 healthy Gambian children aged 8–15 years were screened for P. falciparum infection (by 18sRNA PCR) and/or anaemia (by haematocrit) at the end of the annual malaria transmission season (t(1)). P. falciparum-infected children and children with moderate or severe anaemia (haemoglobin concentration < 11g/dl) were age matched to healthy, uninfected, non-anaemic controls and screened again 2 months later (t(2)). Persistently infected children (PCR positive at t(1) and t(2)) had stable parasite burdens and did not differ significantly haematologically or in terms of proinflammatory markers from healthy, uninfected children. However, among persistently infected children, IL-10 concentrations were positively correlated with parasite density suggesting a tolerogenic response to persistent infection. By contrast, children who naturally resolved their infections (positive at t(1) and negative at t(2)) exhibited mild erythrocytosis and concentrations of pro-inflammatory markers were raised compared to other groups of children. These findings shed light on a ‘resetting’ and potential overshoot of the homeostatic haematological response following resolution of malaria infection. Interestingly, the majority of parameters tested were highly heterogeneous in uninfected children, suggesting that some may be harbouring cryptic malaria or other infections.
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spelling pubmed-88317622022-02-12 ‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children Mooney, Jason P. DonVito, Sophia M. Jahateh, Maimuna Bittaye, Haddy Keith, Marianne Galloway, Lauren J. Ndow, Mortala Cunnington, Aubrey J. D’Alessandro, Umberto Bottomley, Christian Riley, Eleanor M. Front Immunol Immunology Recent malaria is associated with an increased risk of systemic bacterial infection. The aetiology of this association is unclear but malaria-related haemolysis may be one contributory factor. To characterise the physiological consequences of persistent and recently resolved malaria infections and associated haemolysis, 1650 healthy Gambian children aged 8–15 years were screened for P. falciparum infection (by 18sRNA PCR) and/or anaemia (by haematocrit) at the end of the annual malaria transmission season (t(1)). P. falciparum-infected children and children with moderate or severe anaemia (haemoglobin concentration < 11g/dl) were age matched to healthy, uninfected, non-anaemic controls and screened again 2 months later (t(2)). Persistently infected children (PCR positive at t(1) and t(2)) had stable parasite burdens and did not differ significantly haematologically or in terms of proinflammatory markers from healthy, uninfected children. However, among persistently infected children, IL-10 concentrations were positively correlated with parasite density suggesting a tolerogenic response to persistent infection. By contrast, children who naturally resolved their infections (positive at t(1) and negative at t(2)) exhibited mild erythrocytosis and concentrations of pro-inflammatory markers were raised compared to other groups of children. These findings shed light on a ‘resetting’ and potential overshoot of the homeostatic haematological response following resolution of malaria infection. Interestingly, the majority of parameters tested were highly heterogeneous in uninfected children, suggesting that some may be harbouring cryptic malaria or other infections. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8831762/ /pubmed/35154104 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.780525 Text en Copyright © 2022 Mooney, DonVito, Jahateh, Bittaye, Keith, Galloway, Ndow, Cunnington, D’Alessandro, Bottomley and Riley https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Mooney, Jason P.
DonVito, Sophia M.
Jahateh, Maimuna
Bittaye, Haddy
Keith, Marianne
Galloway, Lauren J.
Ndow, Mortala
Cunnington, Aubrey J.
D’Alessandro, Umberto
Bottomley, Christian
Riley, Eleanor M.
‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children
title ‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children
title_full ‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children
title_fullStr ‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children
title_full_unstemmed ‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children
title_short ‘Bouncing Back’ From Subclinical Malaria: Inflammation and Erythrocytosis After Resolution of P. falciparum Infection in Gambian Children
title_sort ‘bouncing back’ from subclinical malaria: inflammation and erythrocytosis after resolution of p. falciparum infection in gambian children
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8831762/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35154104
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.780525
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