• Title of article

    Detection of CD4+CD45RO+T Lymphocytes Producing IL-4 in Response to Antigens onPlasmodium falciparumErythrocytes: Anin VitroCorrelate of Protective Immunity Induced with AttenuatedPlasmodium falciparumSporozoites

  • Author/Authors

    Bergmann، نويسنده , , Elke S. and Ballou، نويسنده , , Ripley W. and Krzych، نويسنده , , Urszula، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    143
  • To page
    152
  • Abstract
    Malaria is caused byPlasmodiumspp. and is one of the major infectious diseases leading to morbidity and mortality in tropical areas of the world. The model of protective immunity induced by immunization with radiation-attenuatedPlasmodiasporozoites (SPZ) has become the framework for the elucidation of protective immune mechanisms and the prototype for a promising vaccine strategy. We have previously reported that although considered stage specific based on antibody and CD8+cytolytic T lymphocyte responses directed against preerythrocytic stage antigens, in particular, the circumsporozoite protein and sporozoite surface protein 2, protective immunity induced in humans by attenuatedPlasmodium falciparumSPZ may also involve CD4+T cell responding to antigens present on parasitized red blood cells (pRBC). In this study we examined the functional role of pRBC responding CD4+T cells by comparingin vitropRBC-stimulated responses of CD4+T cells from persons during preimmunity to irradiated SPZ, during induction of protection, and infection induced with SPZ. The results reported herein corroborate previously published observations that antigens associated with pRBC induce proliferative CD4+lymphocytes responses in subjects exposed to malaria parasite-derived antigens and not malaria-naive persons; however, now we demonstrate that pRBC-proliferative CD4+T cells did not coincide with protective immunity. Similarly, pRBC-induced IFN-γ levels did not distinguish malaria protected from susceptible persons, although IFN-γ was observed only in lymphocyte cultures from malaria parasite-exposed volunteers and not in lymphocyte cultures from malaria-naive persons. In contrast, we noted an increase in the IL-4-producing CD4+T cells that also exhibited the memory phenotype, CD45RO, and an upregulated expression of CD25 in cultures from malaria protected persons as compared to malaria naive persons and subjects who became parasitemic. Hence, these observations suggest that the induction of memory CD4+T cell subset distinguished by the expression of CD45RO and CD25 and production of IL-4 coincides with protective immune responses generated by immunization with attenuated SPZ.
  • Journal title
    Cellular Immunology
  • Serial Year
    1997
  • Journal title
    Cellular Immunology
  • Record number

    1852660