Type I Interferons Regulate Immune Responses in Humans with Blood-Stage Plasmodium falciparum Infection

نویسندگان

  • Marcela Montes de Oca
  • Rajiv Kumar
  • Fabian de Labastida Rivera
  • Fiona H. Amante
  • Meru Sheel
  • Rebecca J. Faleiro
  • Patrick T. Bunn
  • Shannon E. Best
  • Lynette Beattie
  • Susanna S. Ng
  • Chelsea L. Edwards
  • Glen M. Boyle
  • Ric N. Price
  • Nicholas M. Anstey
  • Jessica R. Loughland
  • Julie Burel
  • Denise L. Doolan
  • Ashraful Haque
  • James S. McCarthy
  • Christian R. Engwerda
چکیده

The development of immunoregulatory networks is important to prevent disease. However, these same networks allow pathogens to persist and reduce vaccine efficacy. Here, we identify type I interferons (IFNs) as important regulators in developing anti-parasitic immunity in healthy volunteers infected for the first time with Plasmodium falciparum. Type I IFNs suppressed innate immune cell function and parasitic-specific CD4+ T cell IFNγ production, and they promoted the development of parasitic-specific IL-10-producing Th1 (Tr1) cells. Type I IFN-dependent, parasite-specific IL-10 production was also observed in P. falciparum malaria patients in the field following chemoprophylaxis. Parasite-induced IL-10 suppressed inflammatory cytokine production, and IL-10 levels after drug treatment were positively associated with parasite burdens before anti-parasitic drug administration. These findings have important implications for understanding the development of host immune responses following blood-stage P. falciparum infection, and they identify type I IFNs and related signaling pathways as potential targets for therapies or vaccine efficacy improvement.

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عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 17  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2016