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Innate immune responses to malaria-infected erythrocytes in pregnant women: Effects of gravidity, malaria infection, and geographic location

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 13:29 authored by Marzieh Jabbarzare, Madi Njie, Anthony JaworowskiAnthony Jaworowski, Alexandra Umbers, Maria Ome-Kaius, Wina Hasang, Louise Randall, Bill Kalionis, Stephen Rogerson
Background Malaria in pregnancy causes maternal, fetal and neonatal morbidity and mortality, and maternal innate immune responses are implicated in pathogenesis of these complications. The effects of malaria exposure and obstetric and demographic factors on the early maternal immune response are poorly understood. Methods Peripheral blood mononuclear cell responses to Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes and phytohemagglutinin were compared between pregnant women from Papua New Guinea (malaria-exposed) with and without current malaria infection and from Australia (unexposed). Elicited levels of inflammatory cytokines at 48 h and 24 h (interferon γ, IFN-γ only) and the cellular sources of IFN-γ were analysed. Results Among Papua New Guinean women, microscopic malaria at enrolment did not alter peripheral blood mononuclear cell responses. Compared to samples from Australia, cells from Papua New Guinean women secreted more inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factorα, interleukin 1β, interleukin 6 and IFN-γ; p<0.001 for all assays, and more natural killer cells produced IFN-γ in response to infected erythrocytes and phytohemagglutinin. In both populations, cytokine responses were not affected by gravidity, except that in the Papua New Guinean cohort multigravid women had higher IFN-γ secretion at 24 h (p = 0.029) and an increased proportion of IFN-γ+ Vδ2 γδ T cells (p = 0.003). Cytokine levels elicited by a pregnancy malaria-specific CSA binding parasite line, CS2, were broadly similar to those elicited by CD36-binding line P6A1. Conclusions Geographic location and, to some extent, gravidity influence maternal innate immunity to malaria.

History

Journal

PLoS ONE

Volume

15

Number

e0236375

Issue

7

Start page

1

End page

15

Total pages

15

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 Jabbarzare et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.

Former Identifier

2006100967

Esploro creation date

2020-09-08

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