| Literature DB >> 21931706 |
Lynn Meurs1, Lucja Labuda, Abena Serwaa Amoah, Moustapha Mbow, Ulysse Ateba Ngoa, Daniel Adjei Boakye, Souleymane Mboup, Tandakha Ndiaye Dièye, Adrian P Mountford, Joseph D Turner, Peter Gottfried Kremsner, Katja Polman, Maria Yazdanbakhsh, Ayola Akim Adegnika.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schistosoma infection is thought to lead to down-regulation of the host's immune response. This has been shown for adaptive immune responses, but the effect on innate immunity, that initiates and shapes the adaptive response, has not been extensively studied. In a first study to characterize these responses, we investigated the effect of Schistosoma haematobium infection on cytokine responses of Gabonese schoolchildren to a number of Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21931706 PMCID: PMC3169609 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
General characteristics of the study population.
| Uninfected | Infected | |
| N | 13 | 17 |
| Age (mean (range)) | 10.2 y (7–16) | 11.4 y (7–16) |
| Sex (boys/girls) | 8/5 | 9/8 |
| BMI (median (interquartile range)) | 15.5 kg/m2 (2.83) | 15.7 kg/m2 (1.64) |
|
| Not applicable | 9.8 eggs/10 ml (1–1002) |
| Intestinal helminth infection (n/total) | 5/12 | 5/11 |
|
| 1 | 2/12 |
|
| 2 | 2 |
|
| 4 | 2 |
| Malaria (n/total) | 1/12 | 0/17 |
| Microfilariasis (n/total) | 0/12 | 1/17 |
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (median (range)) | 15 mm/h (6–50) | 15 mm/h (10–88) |
| Level of white blood cells (median (range)) | 8.70•103/µl (3.80–10.30) | 7.20•103/µl (5.00–12.40) |
| Level of lymphocytes (median (range)) | 3.22•103/µl (1.68–5.00) | 3.33•103/µl (1.26–4.60) |
| Level of monocytes (median (range)) | 0.68•103/µl (0.36–1.00) | 0.64•103/µl (0.49–1.04) |
| Level of neutrophils (median (range)) | 2.99•103/µl (1.06–6.08) | 2.14•103/µl (1.05–5.79) |
| Level of eosinophils (median (range)) | 0.79•103/µl (0.20–1.93) | 1.53•103/µl (0.50–2.49) |
| Level of basophils (median (range)) | 0.09•103/µl (0.04–0.27) | 0.07•103/µl (0.04–0.12) |
| Level of hemoglobin (median (range)) | 12.2 g/dl (11.4–13.2) | 11.3 g/dl (9.1–13.6) |
Thick smears (n = 1) for the diagnosis of blood parasites as well as stool samples (n = 6 for Kato-Katz and n = 5 for coproculture) for the diagnosis of intestinal helminths were missing at random.
* Including one child with a T. trichiura - N. americanus co-infection.
** Including one child with a T. trichiura - A. lumbricoides co-infection.
*** Including one child with a T. trichiura - N. americanus co-infection and another one with a T. trichiura - A. lumbricoides co-infection.
Figure 1Cytokine production in response to TLR ligands in PBMC cultures.
White and grey boxes correspond to S. haematobium-free and infected children respectively with the whiskers indicating minimal and maximal concentrations. * p<0.05; ** p<0.01. Panel A: At 24 h, the ‘innate’ time-point, infected children produced significantly more TNF-α in response to the TLR2/1 ligand Pam3CSK4 (Pam3) compared with uninfected children. TLR-mediated IL-10 production did not significantly deviate between infection groups. When innate cytokine responses faded at 72 h, similar trends were observed. These plots were not adjusted for spontaneous cytokine production. Panel B: At both time points, pro-inflammatory indices (i.e. cytokine ratio induced by one of the stimuli relative to the spontaneously produced ratio) induced by the TLR2 ligands, Pam3 and FSL-1, were significantly higher in infected versus uninfected children.
Figure 2Cytokine production in response to schistosomal products in PBMC cultures.
PBMCs were stimulated with schistosomal egg antigen (SEA) or adult worm antigen (AWA). White and grey boxes correspond to S. haematobium-free and infected children respectively with the whiskers indicating minimal and maximal concentrations. * p<0.05; ** p<0.01. Panel A: Cytokine production did not differ between groups at 24 h (mainly innate response) but the adaptive IL-10 response after 72 h of incubation to both schistosomal products was significantly higher in infected children than in S. haematobium-free children. Furthermore, only infected children produced a significant innate TNF-α response to schistosomal products at 24 h. These plots are not adjusted for spontaneous cytokine production. Panel B: After 24 h (predominantly innate), most cytokine ratios induced by schistosomal products were more anti-inflammatory than the ratios induced by medium alone. When the adaptive response had developed after 72 h however, only infected children produced significant anti-inflammatory cytokine balances while pro-inflammatory indices were lower in infected children than in uninfected children (AWA; p<0.05).