학술논문

Timing of in utero malaria exposure influences fetal CD4 T cell regulatory versus effector differentiation
Document Type
article
Source
Malaria Journal. 15(1)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Pediatric
Pediatric Research Initiative
HIV/AIDS
Rare Diseases
Infectious Diseases
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
Clinical Research
Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods
Malaria
Prevention
Vector-Borne Diseases
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Reproductive health and childbirth
Infection
Inflammatory and immune system
Good Health and Well Being
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes
Cohort Studies
Dendritic Cells
Female
Fetal Blood
Flow Cytometry
Humans
Immunophenotyping
Infant
Newborn
Placenta Diseases
Plasmodium
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Complications
Infectious
Young Adult
Pregnancy-associated malaria
Fetal immune response
Immune tolerance
CD4 T cells
Dendritic cells
Loop-mediated isothermal amplification
Microbiology
Public Health and Health Services
Tropical Medicine
Medical microbiology
Public health
Language
Abstract
BackgroundIn malaria-endemic areas, the first exposure to malaria antigens often occurs in utero when the fetal immune system is poised towards the development of tolerance. Children exposed to placental malaria have an increased risk of clinical malaria in the first few years of life compared to unexposed children. Recent work has suggested the potential of pregnancy-associated malaria to induce immune tolerance in children living in malaria-endemic areas. A study was completed to evaluate the effect of malaria exposure during pregnancy on fetal immune tolerance and effector responses.MethodsUsing cord blood samples from a cohort of mother-infant pairs followed from early in pregnancy until delivery, flow cytometry analysis was completed to assess the relationship between pregnancy-associated malaria and fetal cord blood CD4 and dendritic cell phenotypes.ResultsCord blood FoxP3+ Treg counts were higher in infants born to mothers with Plasmodium parasitaemia early in pregnancy (12-20 weeks of gestation; p = 0.048), but there was no association between Treg counts and the presence of parasites in the placenta at the time of delivery (by loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP); p = 0.810). In contrast, higher frequencies of activated CD4 T cells (CD25+FoxP3-CD127+) were observed in the cord blood of neonates with active placental Plasmodium infection at the time of delivery (p = 0.035). This population exhibited evidence of effector memory differentiation, suggesting priming of effector T cells in utero. Lastly, myeloid dendritic cells were higher in the cord blood of infants with histopathologic evidence of placental malaria (p