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Publication : Malaria-induced murine pregnancy failure: distinct roles for IFN-gamma and TNF.

First Author  Poovassery JS Year  2009
Journal  J Immunol Volume  183
Issue  8 Pages  5342-9
PubMed ID  19783682 Mgi Jnum  J:153598
Mgi Id  MGI:4365851 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.0901669
Citation  Poovassery JS, et al. (2009) Malaria-induced murine pregnancy failure: distinct roles for IFN-gamma and TNF. J Immunol 183(8):5342-9
abstractText  Although an important role for excessive proinflammatory cytokines in compromise of pregnancy has been established, an immunological basis for malaria-induced fetal loss remains to be demonstrated. In this study, the roles of IFN-gamma and TNF in Plasmodium chabaudi AS-induced fetal loss in mice were directly investigated. Pregnant IFN-gamma(-/-) mice experienced a more severe course of infection compared with intact C57BL/6 mice, characterized by high parasitemia, severe anemia, and marked weight loss. However, fetal loss was delayed in these mice relative to intact controls. Because IFN-gamma(-/-) mice exhibited sustained levels of plasma TNF, the role of this cytokine was examined. Whereas splenic tnf expression in C57BL/6 mice was highest 3 days before peak parasitemia, increased placental expression relative to uninfected mice was sustained, indicating that locally produced TNF may be important in malaria-induced pregnancy failure. Indeed, Ab neutralization of TNF resulted in preservation of embryos until day 12 of gestation, at which point all embryos were lost in untreated mice. Histological analysis revealed that TNF ablation preserved placental architecture whereas placentae from untreated infected mice had widespread hemorrhage and placental disruption, with fibrin thrombi in some maternal blood sinusoids. Consistent with a role for cytokine-driven thrombosis in fetal loss, expression of procoagulant tissue factor was significantly increased in the placentae of infected C57BL/6 mice but was reduced in mice treated with anti-TNF Ab. Together, these results suggest that IFN-gamma contributes to malaria-induced fetal loss and TNF is a critical factor that acts by inducing placental coagulopathy.
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