Abstract
Annual Review of Immunology
Vol. 23:
69-99
(Volume publication date April 2005)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.immunol.23.021704.115638)
First published online as a Review in Advance on September 22, 2004DEVELOPMENT AND REGULATION OF CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNE RESPONSES TO THE BLOOD STAGES OF MALARIA: Implications for Vaccine Research Michael F. Good, Huji Xu, Michelle Wykes, and Christian R. Engwerda The Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane, 4029, Australia; email: michaelG@qimr.edu.au ▪ Abstract The immune response to the malaria parasite is complex and poorly understood. Although antibodies and T cells can control parasite growth in model systems, natural immunity to malaria in regions of high endemicity takes several years to develop. Variation and polymorphism of antibody target antigens are known to impede immune responses, but these factors alone cannot account for the slow acquisition of immunity. In human and animal model systems, cell-mediated responses can control parasite growth effectively, but such responses are regulated by parasite load via direct effects on dendritic cells and possibly on T and B cells as well. Furthermore, high parasite load is associated with pathology, and cell-mediated responses may also harm the host. Inflammatory cytokines have been implicated in the pathogenesis of cerebral malaria, anemia, weight loss, and respiratory distress in malaria. Immunity without pathology requires rapid parasite clearance, effective regulation of the inflammatory antiparasite effects of cellular responses, and the eventual development of a repertoire of antibodies effective against multiple strains. Data suggest that this may be hastened by exposure to malaria antigens in low dose, leading to augmented cellular immunity and rapid parasite clearance. Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)Along a TNF-paved road from dead parasites in red cells to cerebral malaria, and beyond Characterization of cerebral malaria in the outbred Swiss Webster mouse infected by
Plasmodium berghei
ANKA International Journal of Experimental Pathology 90(2):119-130 (2009) Association of Early Interferon‐γ Production with Immunity to Clinical Malaria: A Longitudinal Study among Papua New Guinean Children Clinical Infectious Diseases 47(11):1380-1387 (2009) What really happens to dendritic cells during malaria? Nature Reviews Microbiology 6(11):864-870 (2008) A central role for free heme in the pathogenesis of severe malaria: the missing link? Journal of Molecular Medicine 86(10):1097-1111 (2008)
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