| Literature DB >> 34456927 |
Haoan Yi1, Weiyang Jiang1, Fang Yang1, Fan Li2, Yirong Li3, Wenjing Zhu4, Qing Li1, Syed Hassam Fakhar5, Yaming Cao6, Lan Luo1, Wen Zhang1, Yongshu He1.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies provide compelling evidence that glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency individuals are relatively protected against Plasmodium parasite infection. However, the animal model studies on this subject are lacking. Plus, the underlying mechanism in vivo is poorly known. In this study, we used a G6pd-deficient mice infected with the rodent parasite Plasmodium berghei (P.berghei) to set up a malaria model in mice. We analyzed the pathological progression of experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) and acute liver injury in mice with different G6pd activity infected with P.berghei. We performed dual RNA-seq for host-parasite transcriptomics and validated the changes of proinflammatory response in the murine model. G6pd-deficient mice exhibited a survival advantage, less severe ECM and mild liver injury compared to the wild type mice. Analysis based on dual RNA-seq suggests that G6pd-deficient mice are protected from ECM and acute liver injury were related to proinflammatory responses. Th1 differentiation and dendritic cell maturation in the liver and spleen were inhibited in G6pd-deficient mice. The levels of proinflammatory cytokines were reduced, chemokines and vascular adhesion molecules in the brain were significantly down-regulated, these led to decreased cerebral microvascular obstruction in G6pd-deficient mice. We generated the result that G6pd-deficiency mediated protection against ECM and acute liver injury were driven by the regulatory proinflammatory responses. Furthermore, bioinformatics analyses showed that P.berghei might occur ribosome loss in G6pd-deficient mice. Our findings provide a novel perspective of the underlying mechanism of G6PD deficiency mediated protection against malaria in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: G6PD deficiency; Plasmodium berghei; acute liver injury; experimental cerebral malaria; proinflammatory response
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34456927 PMCID: PMC8386684 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.719189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1G6pd-deficient mice infected with P.berghei showed milder complications compared to wild type mice. (A) Survival analysis of wild type and G6pd-deficient mice infected with P.berghei. Mice were injected intraperitoneally with 106 pRBCs infected with P.berghei, infected mice were monitored daily for survival. (n =15/each group, data are combined from three independent experiments) (B) Dynamics change of parasitemia. Parasitemia was monitored until the mice died or day 20 post-infection. (C) Whole brains of Evans blue dye leakage in wild type and G6pd-deficient mice and quantification analysis of Evans blue dye extravasation in the brain using spectrophotometer. (n = 5/each group, data are representative of three independent experiments) (D) Representative images of HE staining of the liver showed that the level of immune cell infiltration (arrows) was reduced in G6pd-deficient mice infection with P.berghei on day 7 post-infection. The contents present in the red box are indicative of the high magnification observation of the display. Yellow scale bars, 200μm; Red scale bars,50μm. (n = 5/each group, data are representative of three independent experiments) (E) Serum enzymatic indicators showed that G6pd-deficient mice had less liver injury in response to P.berghei infection compared to wild type mice on day 7 post-infection. (n = 5/each group, data are representative of three independent experiments).
Figure 2Bioinformatics analysis based on transcriptome showed that G6pd-deficient mice altered the immune response in response to P.berghei infection. (A) GSEA showed that P.berghei infected wild type mice significantly upregulated the immune response compared to uninfected mice on day 7 post-infection. (B) GSEA showed that G6pd-deficient mice down-regulated immune response compared to wild type mice on day 7 post-infection. (C) PPI analysis based on significantly differentially expressed genes(uninfected wild mice compared to infected wild mice) showed that P.berghei infection induced host antigen recognition and immune response compared to uninfected mice on day 7 post-infection. The redder the color, the more critical the gene is in the network. (D) PPI analysis based on significantly differentially expressed genes(infected wild mice compared to infected hemizygous mice) showed that G6pd-deficient mice suppressed the immune response induced by P.berghei infection compared to wild type mice on day 7 post-infection. The redder the color, the more critical the gene is in the network. (E) KEGG enrichment of differentially expressed genes of Plasmodium parasites on different hosts. Unmapped reads were extracted and aligned to the P.berghei genome and differentially expressed genes were identified and enriched with KEGG database. The ribosome loss maybe occurs in P.berghei parasites on the G6pd-deficient mice.
Figure 3G6pd-deficient mice suppresses the proinflammatory response after P.berghei infection. (A) Frequencies of the respective Th1 populations in the spleen and liver on day 7 post-infection. (B) Frequencies of the respective Treg populations in the spleen and liver on day 7 post-infection. (C) Frequencies of the mature DCs in the spleen and liver on day 7 post-infection. (D) Heatmap of relative cytokine gene expression in the spleens on day 7 post-infection. Expression levels were quantified by real-time quantitative PCR with β-actin as the internal reference and normalized. (E) Serum IFN-γ, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-12, TNF-α, IL-10 and TGF-β levels were quantified by ELISA on day 7 post-infection. (n = 5/each group, data are representative of three independent experiments).
Figure 4G6pd-deficient mice reduced chemokines and adhesion molecules expression in brain compared with wild type mice in response to P.berghei infection. (A) Heatmap of relative chemokines and adhesion molecules expression in brain on day 7 post-infection. Expression levels were quantified by real-time quantitative PCR with β-actin as the internal reference and normalized. (B) Brain pathology of mice. Representative images of brain sections with the microvessels (arrows) from uninfected and P.berghei infected mice on day 7 post-infection. The contents present in the red box are indicative of the high magnification observation of the display. Yellow scale bars, 200μm; Red scale bars,50μm. (C) The plot graphs show quantification of the data in (B). Microvessels per microscopic field were quantified in 20 fields per mouse and the values are presented in the corresponding plot graphs. (D) The cell number of CD8+T cells (CD45+CD3+CD8+Granzyme B+) in brain were quantified. (n = 5/each group, data are representative of three independent experiments.).