Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Some patients with Plasmodium falciparum infections develop cerebral malaria, acute respiratory distress, and shock and ultimately die even though drug therapy has eliminated the parasite from the blood, suggesting that a systemic inflammatory response contributes to malarial pathogenesis. Plasmodium berghei-infected mice are a well-recognized model of severe malaria (experimental severe malaria [ESM]), and infected mice exhibit a systemic inflammatory response. Because platelets are proposed to contribute to ESM and other systemic inflammatory responses, we determined whether platelet adherence contributes to experimental malarial pathogenesis. Indeed, a significant (P < 0.005) increase in the number of rolling and adherent platelets was observed by intravital microscopy in brain venules of P. berghei-infected mice compared with the number in uninfected controls. P-selectin- or ICAM-1-deficient mice exhibit increased survival after P. berghei infection. We observed a significant (P < 0.0001) reduction in the morbidity of mice injected with anti-CD41 (alpha(IIb) or gpIIb) monoclonal antibody on day 1 of P. berghei infection compared with the morbidity of infected controls injected with rat immunoglobulin G. Additionally, platelet rolling and adhesion in brain venules were reduced in P. berghei mice lacking either P-selectin or ICAM-1 or when the platelets were coated with anti-CD41 monoclonal antibody. Unlike other inflammatory conditions, we did not detect platelet-leukocyte interactions during P. berghei malaria. Because (i). leukocyte adhesion is not markedly altered in the absence of P-selectin or ICAM-1 and (ii). CD41 is not an adhesion molecule for parasitized erythrocytes, these findings support the hypothesis that inhibition of platelet adhesion to the brain microvasculature protects against development of malarial pathogenesis.
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PMID:Inhibition of platelet adherence to brain microvasculature protects against severe Plasmodium berghei malaria. 1457 77

Accumulating evidence indicates that platelets play a critical role in the pathogenesis of experimental severe malaria (ESM) elicited by infection with Plasmodium berghei. Mice injected on day 1 of P berghei infection (early) with either anti-CD41 or anti-CD61 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) exhibited significantly (P<.001) increased survival from ESM compared with infection controls, indicating that platelets function early in the disease. In contrast, groups of mice treated on days 4, 5, and 6 (late) with anti-CD41 mAb exhibited similar mortality as controls. Because platelet depletion by anti-CD41 mAb on day 4 of infection did not protect mice, and platelet adherence occurs on day 6, platelet adherence to endothelium is not required to mediate malarial pathogenesis. Few platelet microparticles were detected in the blood during the course of malaria, but large numbers of erythrocyte vesicles, microparticles, and debris were detected. The protective effect of early anti-CD41 mAb treatment was independent of the number of platelets, platelet microparticles, erythrocyte-platelet conjugates, and erythrocyte vesicles. Mice treated early with anti-CD41 mAb exhibited markedly altered cytokine production on day 4 of P berghei infection (increased interleukin 10 [IL-10], IL-1alpha, IL-6, interferon-gamma [IFN-gamma], and tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-alpha]; decreased IL-2) but no decline in coagulation factors compared with rat immunoglobulin G (IgG)-treated controls, indicating that platelets regulate the levels of pathogenic cytokines.
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PMID:Platelet depletion by anti-CD41 (alphaIIb) mAb injection early but not late in the course of disease protects against Plasmodium berghei pathogenesis by altering the levels of pathogenic cytokines. 1549 26

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.
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PMID:Cell- rather than antibody-mediated immunity leads to the development of profound thrombocytopenia during experimental Plasmodium berghei malaria. 1630 80

The 4-bp deletion (-CTTT) at codon 41/42 (CD41/42) of the human beta-globin gene represents one of the most common beta-thalassemia mutations in East Asia and Southeast Asia, which is historically afflicted with endemic malaria, thus hypothetically evolving under natural selection by malaria infection. To understand the evolutionary process of generating the beta(CD41/42) allele and its maintenance, including the effect of natural selection on the pattern of linkage disequilibrium (LD), we sequenced a 15.933-kb region spanning 20.693 kb of the beta-globin cluster surrounding the 4-bp deletion using a sample from a Chinese population consisting of 24 normal individuals and 16 heterozygotes for the deletion. Forty-nine polymorphic sites were found. Analysis of the data, using a variety of methods including formal population genetics analysis and visual approaches, suggests that the spread of the CD41/42 (-CTTT) deletion is most likely mediated by interallelic gene conversion, although independent deletions in different lineages are also possible. The neutrality test resulted in a significant positive Tajima's D for the beta-globin locus, which is consistent with the existence of balancing selection. This suggests that the 4-bp deletion that occurred at this locus may be an event that is subject to natural selection, due to malaria, which leads to the heterozygote advantage, spread widely with further help by conversion and migration. The evolutionary process of this mutant through gene conversion that could conceivably take place between the 4-bp deletion and the normal sequence in the respective region is discussed in detail.
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PMID:Evidence of gene conversion in the evolutionary process of the codon 41/42 (-CTTT) mutation causing beta-thalassemia in southern China. 1841 26

Clinical studies indicate that thrombocytopenia correlates with the development of severe falciparum malaria, suggesting that platelets either contribute to control of parasite replication, possibly as innate parasite killer cells or function in eliciting pathogenesis. Removal of platelets by anti-CD41 mAb treatment, platelet inhibition by aspirin, and adoptive transfer of wild-type (WT) platelets to CD40-KO mice, which do not control parasite replication, resulted in similar parasitemia compared with control mice. Human platelets at a physiologic ratio of 1 platelet to 9 red blood cells (RBCs) did not inhibit the in vitro development or replication of blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum The percentage of Plasmodium-infected (iRBCs) with bound platelets during the ascending parasitemia in Plasmodium chabaudi- and Plasmodium berghei-infected mice and the 48-hour in vitro cycle of P falciparum was <10%. P chabaudi and P berghei iRBCs with apoptotic parasites (TdT+) exhibited minimal platelet binding (<5%), which was similar to nonapoptotic iRBCs. These findings collectively indicate platelets do not kill bloodstage Plasmodium at physiologically relevant effector-to-target ratios. P chabaudi primary and secondary parasitemia was similar in mice depleted of platelets by mAb-injection just before infection, indicating that activation of the protective immune response does not require platelets. In contrast to the lack of an effect on parasite replication, adoptive transfer of WT platelets to CD40-KO mice, which are resistant to experimental cerebral malaria, partially restored experimental cerebral malaria mortality and symptoms in CD40-KO recipients, indicating platelets elicit pathogenesis and platelet CD40 is a key molecule.
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PMID:Platelets activate a pathogenic response to blood-stage Plasmodium infection but not a protective immune response. 2833 29