|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Cell- rather than antibody-mediated immunity leads to the development of profound thrombocytopenia during experimental Plasmodium berghei malaria.

First Author  Gramaglia I Year  2005
Journal  J Immunol Volume  175
Issue  11 Pages  7699-707
PubMed ID  16301680 Mgi Jnum  J:122163
Mgi Id  MGI:3713426 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.175.11.7699
Citation  Gramaglia I, et al. (2005) Cell- rather than antibody-mediated immunity leads to the development of profound thrombocytopenia during experimental Plasmodium berghei malaria. J Immunol 175(11):7699-707
abstractText  Experimental malarial thrombocytopenia can reach life-threatening levels and is believed to be due to Abs targeting platelets for destruction by the reticuloendothelial system. However, we report that Abs account for at most 15% of platelet destruction as Plasmodium berghei-infected B cell-deficient mice exhibited profound thrombocytopenia (83%) as did C57BL/6 controls (98%). Further, no significant increase in Abs bound to intact platelets was observed during infection. P. berghei infection can enhance the activity of anti-platelet Abs as indicated by a significantly (p < 0.005) increased thrombocytopenia on day 4 of infection in mice that were administered a low dose anti-CD41 mAb compared with rat IgG1-injected controls. RAG1-/- and CD4- plus CD8-deficient mice were markedly protected from thrombocytopenia (p < 0.005) and malarial pathogenesis. CD8- or TCRgammadelta-deficient mice were not protected from thrombocytopenia and CD4-deficient mice were modestly protected. RAG1-/- mice exhibited significantly (p < 0.05) lower levels of plasma TNF, IFN-gamma, and IL-12 during infection. IFNgamma-/- and IL-12-/- mice exhibited increased survival but similar thrombocytopenia to C57BL/6 controls. Collectively, these data indicate that thrombocytopenia is necessary but not sufficient for malarial pathogenesis and Abs are not the major contributors to malarial thrombocytopenia. Rather, we propose that both CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations play key roles in malarial thrombocytopenia; a complex bidirectional interaction between cell-mediated immunity and platelets exists during experimental severe malaria that regulates both responses.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

13 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression