Acquired clinical immunity to malaria in non-human primates co-infected with Schistosoma and Plasmodium parasites

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruth K. Nyakundi ◽  
Jann Hau ◽  
Paul Ogongo ◽  
Onkoba Nyamongo ◽  
Maamum Jeneby ◽  
...  

Background. Naturally acquired immunity to malaria develops over several years and can be compromised by concomitant infections. This study explored the influence of chronic schistosomiasis on clinical outcome and immunity to repeated malaria infection. Methods. Two groups of baboons (n=8 each), were infected with Schistosoma mansoni cercariae to establish chronic infections. One of the two groups was treated with Praziquantel to eliminate schistosome infection. The two groups plus a new malaria control group (n=8), were inoculated three times with Plasmodium knowlesi parasites at one-month intervals. Clinical data, IgG, IgG1, memory T-cells and monocyte levels were recorded. Results. We observed after three P. knowlesi infections; i) reduced clinical symptoms in all groups with each subsequent infection, ii) increase IgG and IgG1in the malaria control (Pk-only) group iii) increased IgG and IgG1, CD14 + and CD14 - CD16 + in the Schistosoma treated (Schisto/PZQ+Pk) group and iv) significantly lower IgG and IgG1 levels compared to Pk-only, reduced CD4 + CD45RO + and increased CD14 - CD16 + cells in the co-infected (Schisto+Pk) group. Conclusion. Chronic S. mansoni does not compromise establishment of clinical immunity after multiple malaria infections with non-classical monocytes seeming to play a role. Failure to develop robust antibody and memory T-cells may have a long-term impact on acquired immunity to malaria infection.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raquel Furtado ◽  
Fabien Delahaye ◽  
Jinghang Zhang ◽  
Joowhan Sung ◽  
Paul Karell ◽  
...  

Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) malaria causes high rates of morbidity and mortality and lacks a sufficiently effective vaccine. Clinical immunity develops in residents of malaria endemic regions which confers reduced clinical symptoms during infection and protection against severe disease. We hypothesized that understanding the immune mechanisms of clinical immunity could inform vaccine design to improve efficacy. We compared the peripheral blood cellular and humoral immune responses during a mild episode of Pf malaria infection. Participants were classified as either clinically susceptible or clinically protected, based on the number of recurrent clinical infections over an 18-month longitudinal study in a malaria endemic region in Malawi. Susceptible participants had three or more recurrent clinical episodes while clinically immune individuals had one or none. Protected participants exhibited higher plasma immunoglobulin G (IgG) breadth and titers against Pf antigens, and greater antibody (Ab)-dependent Pf opsonization compared to susceptible participants. Using high dimensional mass cytometry (CyTOF), spectral flow cytometry and single-cell transcriptomic analyses, we identified expanded memory CD4+ T cell clones sharing identical T cell receptor clonotypes in the blood of protected participants during malaria infection. These cells express a strong cytolytic T helper 1 effector program with transcripts encoding granzymes (A, B, H, M), granulysin, NKG7 and the Zeb2 master transcriptional regulator of terminally differentiated effector T cells. Memory CD4+ T cells expressing Zeb2+ were CD39hiTIGIThi and expressed multiple chemotactic and checkpoint inhibitory receptors, although the cellular levels of several of these receptors were reduced in protected compared to susceptible individuals. We propose that clonally expanded Zeb2+ cytolytic memory CD4+ Th1 cells could represent essential contributors to clinical immunity against Pf malaria.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maike Hofmann ◽  
Camilla Jandus ◽  
Lian Ni Lee ◽  
Daniel T. Utzschneider

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
Liangyi Liu ◽  
Aurelie Gomez ◽  
Qing Zhang ◽  
Jilu Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract GVHD of the gastrointestinal tract (GI) is associated with high mortality. We have identified systemic, skin- and GI-specific plasma biomarkers present at clinical GVHD onset, and more recently biomarkers for treatment responsiveness. However, in order to identify early GI-specific biomarkers prior to GVHD onset, we performed state-of-the-art proteomics on plasma samples taken 14 days prior to clinical manifestation of GI GVHD. We selected candidates that were increased at least 1.5 fold in plasma from GI GVHD patients compared to HSCT patients without GVHD at matched time points. We identified two lead proteins: CD146, a cell adhesion and trafficking molecule expressed on a subset of CD4+ T cells and endothelial cells, and the chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 14 that binds to the chemokine receptor CCR5 on T cells. As these proteins have not been previously identified in proteomics experiments and antibodies for their corresponding receptors on T cells were available, we analyzed their expression profiles on PB cells from 214 HSCT patients (71 GI GVHD, 48 no GVHD, 33 non-GVHD enteritis, 22 skin first GVHD, 40 isolated skin GVHD) at the onset of symptoms. The frequency of CD146+CCR5+ T cells was significantly increased in GI GVHD patients compared to patients without GVHD, non-GVHD enteritis, or with isolated skin GVHD, as well as increased in patients who first experienced skin and then GI GVHD (Fig. 1). When using the median % of CD146+CCR5+ T cells detected in GI GVHD patients to classify patients into low and high-risk groups, patients in the high-risk group had higher 6-month non-relapse mortality (42 vs. 20%, p = 0.02). Importantly, CD146+CCR5+ T cells at onset of clinical symptoms were not correlated with GI histologic severity, suggesting that these cells are not mucosa damage products but rather systemic effectors. Thus, we measured their frequencies in samples taken at a median of 19 days post-transplant and with a median interval of 14 days prior to clinical symptoms and found that CD146+CCR5+ T cells circulate in patients before GI GVHD clinical onset. In GI GVHD patients, these cells expressed a Th1 and Th17 phenotype and expressed high levels of the activation marker ICOS known to be critical for the development of human Th17 cells. To test the hypothesis that CD146+ T cells are Th17-prone, we next investigated whether in vitro polarization of CD4 T cells with defined stimulation conditions will increase the CD146+CCR5+ expression as well as the production of Th1 and Th17 cytokines. Fig. 2A demonstrates that CD4 T cells differentiated with both Th17-inducing cytokines and ICOS co-stimulation had a significantly higher percentage of CD146+CCR5+ T cells and co-expressed more IL-17A+IFNγ+ than T-cells stimulated with Th1-inducing cytokines or by CD28. We then analyzed colonic mucosa biopsies from patients with GI GVHD (N = 18) and non-GVHD enteritis (N = 10) for the expression of CD146 by immunohistochemistry. CD146 expression was detected on CD3 lymphoid cells and was strongly present on the endothelium. The CD146+ vessel count in GI GVHD tissues was significantly higher than in non-GVHD enteritis tissues (p < 0.001). Th17 cells migrated more efficiently through endothelial cell monolayers than their Th1 counterparts (Fig. 2B). Lentivirus-mediated shRNA knock-down of CD146 in either cell type demonstrated that reduced CD146 expression on CD4+ T cells, but not on endothelial cells significantly reduced the T-cell transendothelial migration (Fig. 2C), suggesting that CD146 on T cells is paramount for promoting infiltration of pathogenic T cells into GVHD target organs. As proof of principle for this hypothesis, we tested donor CD146-/- T cells in an allogeneic murine GVHD model and did not find any difference in GVHD severity when compared to wild type CD146+/+ T cells. Finally, we used a xenogeneic GVHD mouse model with injection of human CD4+ T cells lentivirally transduced with CD146 or control shRNA. In comparison to the vector control group, mice transplanted with CD146 shRNA transduced T cells did not lose weight (Fig. 3A), had similar human T cells engraftment (B), had less splenic CD146+CCR5+ T cells (C), and expressed less TBET 53 days after transplant (D). In conclusion, early quantification of a novel CD146+CCR5+ Th17-prone and ICOS-induced population may allow identification of patients at risk for GI GVHD development and subsequent mortality. Targeting CD146 may represent a new avenue to treat GVHD. Figure 1 Figure 1. Figure 2 Figure 2. Figure 3 Figure 3. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2016 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael M. Opata ◽  
Robin Stephens

ABSTRACT Exposure to blood-stage malaria infection is often persistent, leading to generation of CD4 effector and effector memory T cells that contribute to protection. We showed previously that chronic exposure to blood-stage Plasmodium chabaudi offers the best protection from parasitemia and pathology in reinfection cases, correlating with an increase in Th1 cells. Although much is known about the features of resting or exhausted memory T cells (Tmem), little is known about the functional capacities of chronically stimulated but protective T cells. To determine the functional capacity of CD4 T cells generated by chronic infection upon reexposure to parasite, we compared their responses to known features of classical Tmem. The numbers of cytokine-producing T cells increased following infection in the polyclonal populations, suggesting an increase in pathogen-specific T cells. Malaria antigen-specific B5 T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic (Tg) T cells from chronic infection proliferated on reinfection and were highly sensitive to TCR stimulation without costimulation, as shown for Tmem in acute stimulations. However, B5 Tmem did not accumulate more than naive B5 T cells in vivo or in vitro and became apoptotic. Failure to accumulate was partly the result of chronic stimulation, since eliminating persistent parasites before reinfection slightly increased the accumulation of B5 Tg T cells upon reinfection. The levels of specific gamma interferon-positive, interleukin-10-positive T cells, which protect animals from pathology, increased after malaria infection. These data demonstrate that although chronic infection generates a protective T cell population with increased TCR sensitivity and cytokine production, they do not reexpand upon reexposure due to increased apoptosis.


2015 ◽  
Vol 194 (11) ◽  
pp. 5346-5354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael M. Opata ◽  
Victor H. Carpio ◽  
Samad A. Ibitokou ◽  
Brian E. Dillon ◽  
Joshua M. Obiero ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Cheng‐Chih Hsiao ◽  
Nina L. Fransen ◽  
Aletta M.R. den Bosch ◽  
Kim I.M. Brandwijk ◽  
Inge Huitinga ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document