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July 7, 2019  |  

Antibody-independent mechanisms regulate the establishment of chronic Plasmodium infection.

Authors: Brugat, Thibaut and Reid, Adam James and Lin, Jingwen and Cunningham, Deirdre and Tumwine, Irene and Kushinga, Garikai and McLaughlin, Sarah and Spence, Philip and Böhme, Ulrike and Sanders, Mandy and Conteh, Solomon and Bushell, Ellen and Metcalf, Tom and Billker, Oliver and Duffy, Patrick E and Newbold, Chris and Berriman, Matthew and Langhorne, Jean

Malaria is caused by parasites of the genus Plasmodium. All human-infecting Plasmodium species can establish long-lasting chronic infections(1-5), creating an infectious reservoir to sustain transmission(1,6). It is widely accepted that the maintenance of chronic infection involves evasion of adaptive immunity by antigenic variation(7). However, genes involved in this process have been identified in only two of five human-infecting species: Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium knowlesi. Furthermore, little is understood about the early events in the establishment of chronic infection in these species. Using a rodent model we demonstrate that from the infecting population, only a minority of parasites, expressing one of several clusters of virulence-associated pir genes, establishes a chronic infection. This process occurs in different species of parasites and in different hosts. Establishment of chronicity is independent of adaptive immunity and therefore different from the mechanism proposed for maintenance of chronic P. falciparum infections(7-9). Furthermore, we show that the proportions of parasites expressing different types of pir genes regulate the time taken to establish a chronic infection. Because pir genes are common to most, if not all, species of Plasmodium(10), this process may be a common way of regulating the establishment of chronic infections.

Journal: Nature microbiology
DOI: 10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.276
Year: 2017

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