Relationships between maternal malaria and malarial immune responses in mothers and neonates
Autor: | A. Jepson, F.N. Rasheed, J.N. Bulmer, M. F. B. Jawla, A. De Francisco, Brian Greenwood, Palle Jakobsen |
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Rok vydání: | 1995 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Adolescent Hydrocortisone Plasmodium falciparum Immunology Antibodies Protozoan Biology Immune system Antigen Pregnancy Immunity Placenta parasitic diseases medicine Animals Humans Malaria Falciparum Infant Newborn Fetal Blood medicine.disease medicine.anatomical_structure Immunoglobulin M Case-Control Studies Immunoglobulin G Pregnancy Complications Parasitic Cord blood biology.protein Female Parasitology Antibody Immunity Maternally-Acquired Malaria |
Zdroj: | Parasite Immunology. 17:1-10 |
ISSN: | 1365-3024 0141-9838 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1365-3024.1995.tb00960.x |
Popis: | Immune responses of 97 Gambian women and their neonates were studied. New methods distinguished between active and previous placental malaria, were used to examine relationships between maternal malaria and neonatal immune responses. Many placentas (61%) had active or previous malarial infection. Maternal and cord malarial IgG levels correlated (P < 0.001). Malarial IgG was raised in cord blood in active placental malaria; IgM was not detected. Mean lymphoproliferation and the proportion of responders to soluble P. falciparum antigens (F32) and conserved regions of p190 expressed on trophozoites and schizonts (190L and 190N) were higher in neonates than mothers. There was no clear relationship between maternal malaria and neonatal mean lymphoproliferation to malarial antigens, although fewer neonates responded when mothers were actively infected. Matched maternal and neonatal lymphoproliferation responses did not correlate. However, first born neonatal lymphoproliferation to PPD and malarial antigens appeared lower than other neonates, in agreement with lower lymphoproliferation in primigravidae compared with multigravidae. Also in common with mothers, autologous plasma suppressed neonatal lymphoproliferation to PPD and malarial antigens, suggesting common immunoregulation. Higher cortisol or other circulating factors in first pregnancies may be implicated. The relevance of cell-mediated malarial immune responses detected at birth remains to be established. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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