Febrile temperature augments ring-stage Plasmodium falciparum adhesion to brain endothelial cells.

Fatou Joof,Ruoqian Hu,Karl B Seydel,Lauren M Cohee,Ying Zheng,Joseph D Smith
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Abstract

Sequestration of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes (IE) in the microvasculature is a major virulence determinant. While the sequestration of mature stage parasites (trophozoite and schizonts) to vascular endothelium is well established, the conditions that promote ring-stage IE sequestration is less understood. Here, we observed in ring-stage parasites that febrile exposure increased transcript levels of several exported parasite genes involved in the trafficking of the P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) ligand responsible for adherence to the endothelium of blood vessels. Furthermore, it accelerated PfEMP1 surface display in ring-stage IEs, leading to a twofold increase in their binding in a perfusable 3D human brain microvessel model. Additionally, we observed that parasite exposure enhances the binding of uninfected erythrocytes (UE) in 3D brain microvessels. These findings suggest a complex interplay between fever and parasite biomass in the pathogenesis of cerebral malaria.
发热温度增加环期恶性疟原虫对脑内皮细胞的粘附。
恶性疟原虫感染的红细胞(IE)在微血管中的隔离是一个主要的毒力决定因素。虽然成熟阶段的寄生虫(滋养体和分裂体)在血管内皮上的隔离已经得到了很好的证实,但促进环期IE隔离的条件却鲜为人知。在环期寄生虫中,我们观察到发热暴露增加了几种输出寄生虫基因的转录水平,这些基因涉及恶性疟原虫红细胞膜蛋白1 (PfEMP1)配体的运输,该配体负责血管内皮的粘附。此外,它加速了PfEMP1在环期IEs中的表面显示,导致它们在可灌注的3D人脑微血管模型中的结合增加了两倍。此外,我们观察到寄生虫暴露增强了3D脑微血管中未感染红细胞(UE)的结合。这些发现表明,在脑型疟疾的发病机制中,发烧和寄生虫生物量之间存在复杂的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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