| Literature DB >> 25699034 |
Ganchimeg Bayarsaikhan1, Masoud Akbari2, Katsuyuki Yui2, Rogerio Amino3.
Abstract
Multiple immunizations using live irradiated sporozoites, the infectious plasmodial stage delivered into the host skin during a mosquito bite, can elicit sterile immunity to malaria. CD8(+) T cells seem to play an essential role in this protective immunity, since their depletion consistently abolishes sterilizing protection in several experimental models. So far, only a few parasite antigens are known to induce CD8(+) T cell-dependent protection, but none of them can reach the levels of protection afforded by live attenuated parasites. Systematic attempts to identify novel antigens associated with this efficient cellular protection were so far unsuccessful. In addition, the precise mechanisms involved in the recognition and elimination of parasitized hepatocytes in vivo by CD8(+) T cells still remain obscure. Recently, it has been shown that specific effector CD8(+) T cells, after recognition of parasitized hepatocytes, recruit specific and non-specific activated CD8(+) T cells to the site of infection, resulting in the formation of cellular clusters around and in the further elimination of intracellular parasites. The significance of this finding is discussed in the perspective of a general mechanism of antigen-dependent focalized inflammation and its consequences for the elimination of malaria liver stages.Entities:
Keywords: CD8+ T cells; Plasmodium; cooperative behavior; in vivo imaging; inflammatory infiltrate
Year: 2015 PMID: 25699034 PMCID: PMC4316770 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Model of the elimination of malaria liver stage by a CD8 Parasite antigens cross the parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM), are processed and presented on the surface of the infected hepatocyte by MHC I molecules, and/or (B) are released in the cytoplasm and presented on the surface of hepatic cells (hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, endothelial cells—figuratively represented by the pink cells) traversed by sporozoites. (A,B) Parasite-specific, activated CD8+ T cell (red cell) recognizes its cognate antigen and (C) recruits other specific and non-specific (purple cells) CD8+ T cells, and presumably other leukocytes (orange cells) to the site of infection. (D) These immune cells cluster around the infected hepatocyte, leading to the elimination of the malaria liver stage and presumably of the infected hepatocyte. For clarity and due to the lack of information about its position during cluster formation, the sinusoidal barrier is not represented in the model.