Protective roles of mast cells and mast cell-derived TNF in murine malaria |
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Authors: | Furuta Takahisa Kikuchi Takane Iwakura Yoichiro Watanabe Naohiro |
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Institution: | Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Division of Infectious Genetics, University of Tokyo, Japan. furuta@ims.u-tokyo.ac.jp |
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Abstract: | TNF plays important roles in the protection and onset of malaria. Although mast cells are known as a source of TNF, little is known about the relationship between mast cells and pathogenesis of malaria. In this study, mast cell-deficient WBB6F1-W/W(v) (W/W(v)) and the control littermate WBB6F1+/+ (+/+) mice were infected with 1 x 10(5) of Plasmodium berghei ANKA. +/+ mice had lower parasitemia with higher TNF levels, as compared with W/W(v) mice. Diminished resistance in W/W(v) mice was considered to be due to mast cells and TNF. This fact was confirmed by experiments in W/W(v) mice reconstituted with bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) of +/+ mice or of TNF-/- mice. W/W(v) mice with BMMCs of +/+ mice exhibit lower parasitemia and mortality accompanying significantly higher TNF levels than those of W/W(v) mice. Parasitemia in W/W(v) mice with BMMCs of TNF-/- mice was higher than that in +/+ mice. Activation of mast cells by anti-IgE or compound 48/80 resulted in release of TNF and decrease of parasitemia. In addition, splenic hypertrophy and increased number of mast cells in the spleen were observed after infection in +/+ mice and W/W(v) mice reconstituted with BMMCs of +/+ mice as compared with W/W(v) mice. These findings propose a novel mechanism that mast cells and mast cell-derived TNF play protective roles in malaria. |
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