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Dichotomous miR expression and immune responses following primary blood-stage malaria
Julie G. Burel, Simon H. Apte, Penny L. Groves, Michelle J. Boyle, Christine Langer, James G. Beeson, James S. McCarthy, Denise L. Doolan
Julie G. Burel, Simon H. Apte, Penny L. Groves, Michelle J. Boyle, Christine Langer, James G. Beeson, James S. McCarthy, Denise L. Doolan
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Research Article Immunology Infectious disease

Dichotomous miR expression and immune responses following primary blood-stage malaria

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Abstract

Clinical responses to infection or vaccination and the development of effective immunity are characterized in humans by a marked interindividual variability. To gain an insight into the factors affecting this variability, we used a controlled human infection system to study early immune events following primary infection of healthy human volunteers with blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum malaria. By day 4 of infection, a dichotomous pattern of high or low expression of a defined set of microRNAs (miRs) emerged in volunteers that correlated with variation in parasite growth rate. Moreover, high-miR responders had higher numbers of activated CD4+ T cells, and developed significantly enhanced antimalarial antibody responses. Notably, a set of 17 miRs was identified in the whole blood of low-miR responders prior to infection that differentiated them from high-miR responders. These data implicate preexisting host factors as major determinants in the ability to effectively respond to primary malaria infection.

Authors

Julie G. Burel, Simon H. Apte, Penny L. Groves, Michelle J. Boyle, Christine Langer, James G. Beeson, James S. McCarthy, Denise L. Doolan

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Figure 3

Increased CD4+ T cell responses in high-miR responders between day 0 and day 7 of infection.

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Increased CD4+ T cell responses in high-miR responders between day 0 and...
Whole blood was collected prior to (d0), and on day 7 of infection (d7) from individuals classified as low-miR responders (n = 9) or high-miR responders (n = 11) as detailed in Figure 2C. (A) White blood cell (WBC) and lymphocyte counts determined on the day of collection by automated cell counter. (B) Correlation of CD4+, CD8+, and CD19+ cell counts in peripheral blood (determined by flow cytometry) and parasite burden over first 7 days of infection (left axis, square symbols), or the average (Avg) of fold changes (FC) for miR15a-3p, miR30c-5p, and miR30e-5p from d0 to d7 of infection (average miR, right axis, round symbols) (Spearman’s correlation). The number of CD4+, CD8+, and CD19+ cells expressing CD69 (C), or coexpressing Ki67 and CD38 was determined directly ex vivo from whole-blood samples by flow cytometry. In A, C, and D the differences between D0 and D7 in low-miR responders or high-miR responders were determined using the nonparametric paired Wilcoxon test; the comparison between the high- and low-responder groups on D0 or on D7 was determined using nonparametric Mann-Whitney test. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01. Graphs show the data for 20 volunteers from 4 independent cohorts. ns, not significant.

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