Understanding the Differences in Plasmodium Falciparum Genetic Diversity and Host Immune Profiles in Asymptomatic and Symptomatic Malaria Infections
Abstract
Malaria remains a serious infectious disease in the tropics whose pathogenesis is attributed to a
complex interaction between parasites with high genetic diversity and robust host immune
responses. In endemic regions, frequent exposure to malaria often leads to acquisition of antidisease
immunity and asymptomatic infections that serve as silent natural reservoirs of infectious
parasites thereby sustaining malaria transmission. Although modulation of host immunity has been
implicated in the maintenance of chronic symptomless infections, it is still unclear how the host
and malaria parasites interactions are involved. To understand this phenomenon, blood samples
from 425 children (<15 years) enrolled in a cohort study in Kilifi County, between 2007 and 2019,
were studied. Annual cross-sectional surveys conducted in the cohort provided samples from
healthy/uninfected and asymptomatic children while weekly follow-ups identified children with
symptomatic malaria. Parasite genetic diversity, using merozoite surface protein 2 as a genetic
marker, and gene expression profiles as well as host immune responses were then studied by
comparing samples from uninfected and/or asymptomatic children with those from subsequent
symptomatic malaria infections. Asymptomatic infections had significantly lower parasite density,
800 parasites/μl compared to febrile malaria 28,800 parasites/μl (p < 0.0001) that mainly
comprised of new parasite clones. They were also more polyclonal (>2 parasite clones per
infection) and had a significantly higher complexity of infection (COI) of 2.3 compared to
symptomatic malaria infections, 2.0 (p = 0.016). Interestingly, children harboring asymptomatic
infections had a parasite transcriptional signature featuring a bias towards the trophozoite stage
(~12 hours-post invasion), while febrile infections featured increased ring stage parasites (~ 9
hours-post invasion). The host response during febrile/symptomatic children featured increased
upregulation of genes associated with inflammatory responses compared to asymptomatic
children. Similarly, uninfected children showed upregulation of genes involved in inflammatory
responses compared to asymptomatic children. Furthermore, the host-responses during
symptomatic malaria infections that followed an asymptomatic infection featured a significant
upregulation of genes related to inflammatory responses (TNFRSFIB, TLR4, CCR7, IL1B,
IFNGR1), whereas the symptomatic host responses from previously uninfected children were
characterized by increased upregulation of genes related to humoral/antibody related immune
responses (IGHM, IKC, IGHG4, IGHG2, C5). The results suggest that asymptomatic children in
Kilifi harbor highly diverse and polyclonal parasites whereas their subsequent symptomatic..................................
Publisher
University of Nairobi
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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