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Yap George S - - 2007
Autophagy has recently been implicated in the immune elimination of the intracellular protozoan parasite, Toxoplasma gondii. Toxoplasma and other apicomplexan parasites actively invade host cells and form nonfusogenic parasitophorous vacuoles. Nevertheless, following entry into IFN-gamma-activated effector macrophages, vesiculation of the parasite vacuole or PV membrane ensues, in a process dependent ...
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CTLA-4 blockade differentially influences the outcome of non-lethal and lethal Plasmodium yoelii ...
Lepenies Bernd - - 2007
An immune response against malaria has to be tightly controlled. The production of pro-inflammatory cytokines is required to control parasites but the same cytokines are also involved in severe malaria. We have shown that CTLA-4 expression during Plasmodium berghei malaria dampens the immune response. This strain provokes a pro-inflammatory immune ...
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Tetsutani K - - 2007
Plasmodium spp. cause the worst parasitic diseases in humans and evade host immunity in complicated ways. Activated catabolism of tryptophan in dendritic cells is thought to suppress immunity, which is mediated by an inducible rate-limiting enzyme of tryptophan catabolism, indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase (IDO), via both tryptophan depletion and production of ...
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Dick Carl W - - 2007
Host specificity gauges the degree to which a parasite occurs in association with a single host species. The measure is indicative of properties of the host and parasite, as well as their ecological and co-evolutionary relationships. Host specificity is influenced by the behavior and ecology of both parasite and host. ...
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Conrad, Sean Martin
Transgenic chemokine-secreting parasites were generated and used to actively recruit immune cells into Leishmania lesions. It was hypothesized that the chemokine induced cell migration would influence the magnitude and character of the immune response and thereby effect the outcome of disease. Two different transgenic chemokine-secreting parasites were engineered. One transgenic ...
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Schofield Louis - - 2007
Malaria infects 5-10% of humanity and causes around two million deaths annually, mostly in children. The disease is of significant interest to immunologists, as acquired host immunity can limit the clinical impact of infection and partially reduces parasite replication; however, immunological reactions also contribute significantly to pathogenesis and fatalities. This ...
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DosReis George A - - 2007
Parasitic diseases have worldwide medical and economical impact. Host T lymphocytes and the cytokines they produce determine the outcome of parasitic infections. Programmed cell death by apoptosis is induced in the course of parasitic infections, and affects cytokine production by removing activated effector T and B cells. In addition, engulfment ...
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Savino Wilson - - 2007
Pathophysiology of Chagas' disease is not completely defined, although innate and adaptative immune responses are crucial. In acute infection some parasite antigens can activate macrophages, and this may result in pro-inflammatory cytokine production, nitric oxide synthesis, and consequent control of parasitemia and mortality. Cell-mediated immunity in Trypanosoma cruzi infection is ...
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Namangala Boniface - - 2007
The socioeconomic implications of trypanosomosis in sub-Saharan Africa and the limitations of its current control regimes have stimulated research into alternative control methods. Considering the pro- and anti-inflammatory properties of transforming growth factor beta1 (TGF-beta1) and its potential to enhance immunity against protozoan parasites, we examined the effects of intraperitoneally ...
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Ramos Espiridión - - 2007
Apoptosis has been described in some parasites like Leishmania, Trypanosoma, and Trichomonas. This phenomenon has not been observed yet in Entamoeba histolytica. This work analyzed the in vitro effect of sodium nitroprusside, sodium nitrite and sodium nitrate (NOs) on E. histolytica apoptosis. Parasites incubated for 1h with NOs revealed apoptosis ...
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Gaddi Pamela J - - 2007
Toxoplasma gondii infection is an important cause of central nervous system and ocular disease, both in immunocompromised and in certain immunocompetent populations. Although parasite-mediated host cell lysis is probably the principal cause of tissue destruction in immunodeficiency states, hypersensitivity and inflammatory responses may underlie severe disease in otherwise immuno-sufficient individuals. ...
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Hale, Katrina Anne
Severe population bottlenecks and the small size of many remnant habitats may render many bird populations prone to extinction from disease outbreaks. Bottlenecks may increase inbreeding which in turn may result in a low diversity of resistance and an immune system that is impaired or defective. Thus, bottlenecked populations may ...
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Pinto, Sofia B.
Anopheles gambiae is the most prominent vector of human malaria in Africa. The causative agents of this disastrous disease are unicellular eukaryotic parasites of the genus Plasmodium which are transmitted to humans by infected female mosquitoes when they take a blood meal. During its development in the mosquito, Plasmodium undergoes ...
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Marzal, Alfonso
Immune responses constitute a major way for hosts to defend themselves against parasites. Because hosts do not habitually produce strong responses all the time, immune responses might be costly to produce or maintain. We tested experimentally if the production of a response to a challenge with a novel antigen resulted ...
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Hasselquist, Dennis
In this review, I focus on three key questions in avian comparative immunoecology: variation in immune responses in relation to sex; latitude (and pace-of-life); and the annual cycle. I present hypotheses and evaluate the so far rather scanty and heterogenic data to test them. Sex differences in immune responses have ...
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Miller Martin R - - 2007
There is a wide variety of resistance mechanisms that hosts may evolve in response to their parasites. These can be functionally classified as avoidance (lower probability of becoming infected), recovery (faster rate of clearance), tolerance (reduced death rate when infected), or acquired immunity. It is commonly thought that longer lived ...
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Villamil Luisa - - 2007
We investigated the role of nitric oxide (NO) in the responses of the Eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica, to the protozoan parasite Perkinsus marinus, causative agent of Dermo disease. P. marinus induced a slight but significant increase in NO production by oyster hemocytes in vitro, comparable to the increase induced by ...
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Muniz-Junqueira Maria Imaculada - - 2007
Malaria is an important problem of public health. It is estimated that 350 to 500 million clinical cases occur annually, which cause 1.1 and 1.3 million deaths every year. The excessive activation of the immune system plays an important role in the pathogenesis of the disease. The cells of the ...
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Pearlman Eric - - 2007
Chronic infection with filarial nematodes results in development of a suppressive response to an immense parasite burden, thereby limiting pathological and clinical manifestations. However, pro-inflammatory responses to dead and degenerating Onchocerca volvulus worms and release of endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria result in corneal opacification, sacrification and visual impairment. This review discusses ...
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Maizels Rick - - 2007
Eukaryotic, multicellular parasites such as the helminth worms have a major impact on the mammalian immune system in two contexts. First, they have evolved sophisticated strategies for long-term immune evasion including recruiting natural suppressive mechanisms such as the regulatory T cell (Tregs). Tregs play a role not only in repressing ...
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Ouaissi Ali - - 2007
Parasitic infections are prevalent in both tropical and subtropical areas. Most of the affected and/or exposed populations are living in developing countries where control measures are lacking or inadequately applied. Although significant progress has been made in our understanding of the immune response to parasites, no definitive step has yet ...
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Chamekh Mustapha - - 2007
Activation of the immune system against protozoan infections relies particularly on two specific signals provided by cognate interaction of T cells with antigen presenting cells (APCs). The first signal is attributed to binding of the T-cell receptor (TCR) to peptide/MHC complexes on the surface of APCs, whereas the second signal ...
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Karunaweera Nadira - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Paroxysms are recurrent febrile episodes, characteristic of Plasmodium vivax infections, which coincide with the rupture of schizont-infected erythrocytes in the patients' circulation. The present study describes the formation of prominent aggregates of leukocytes in vitro in the presence of parasite and host factors released during paroxysms. METHODS: Whole blood ...
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Forbes Mark R - - 2007
Sex biases in immunity have generated much interest because of their possible connection with sex differences in reproductive strategies. Researchers have often argued that males should invest less in immunity than should females. In a recent paper, Stoehr and Kokko challenge this reasonably substantiated view of 'susceptible males'. Their model, ...
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Saeij J P J - - 2007
Toxoplasma gondii, an obligate intracellular parasite of the phylum Apicomplexa, can cause severe disease in humans with an immature or suppressed immune system. The outcome of Toxoplasma infection is highly dependent on the strain type, as are many of its in vitro growth properties. Here we use genetic crosses between ...
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Lamb Erika W - - 2007
Schistosoma blood flukes are trematode parasites with a cosmopolitan distribution that infect over 200 million people globally. We previously showed that Schistosoma mansoni growth and development in the mammalian host is dependent on signals from host CD4+ T cells. To gain insight into the mechanisms that underlie this dependence, we ...
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Yamauchi Lucy M - - 2007
Adhesion of Trypanosoma cruzi to host cells employs mechanisms which are complex and not completely understood. Upon infection, host cells release pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in the environment. These had been found to be involved with increasing parasite uptake as well as killing by macrophages and cardiomyocytes. In the present ...
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Keating John H - - 2006
Schistosomes are intravascular platyhelminth parasites that are exposed in the blood stream to host immunological effectors. Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) can act in vitro to kill the parasites, and this has been proposed as one important mechanism of antiworm immunity in vivo. In this study, we examined sections of adult ...
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Jones L A - - 2006
Ocular toxoplasmosis (OT) can occur in the children of mothers infected with Toxoplasma gondii during pregnancy. It is not limited to the congenitally infected, but can also occur following adult-acquired infection or as a result of disease reactivation in immune-compromised and pregnant individuals. Many aspects of immune privilege in the ...
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Mikolajczak Sebastian A - - 2006
All mammalian malaria parasite species have an initial tissue stage in liver cells. The liver stage produces new parasite forms that can enter and live inside red blood cells. Accordingly, the first place of residence provides parasites with a radically different cellular and molecular environment from their subsequent red blood ...
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Gobert G N - - 2007
Past and more recent research has examined the ultrastructure, metabolism, cell biology, genomics and post-genomics of schistosome schistosomula. These areas are considered and discussed in this review with particular emphasis on (1) the early migration phases through the host, (2) interaction of the host immune response with the parasite surface, ...
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Khalturin Konstantin - - 2007
All organisms rely on their capacity of self/nonself discrimination to rapidly detect approaching allogeneic cells as well as invading pathogenic microbes as foreign and to eliminate them. Failure to recognize nonself causes self-mating, germline parasitism and disease. Recent findings indicate that, in urochordates - the closest living relatives of vertebrates ...
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Kotner Joshua - - 2007
Infection with the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi results in a robust and multifaceted immune response that controls parasite load but is unable to completely clear infection, resulting in parasite persistence and a chronic illness known as Chagas' disease in humans. The severity of Chagas' disease is correlated with persistent parasitism ...
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Walther Michael - - 2006
Taking advantage of a sporozoite challenge model established to evaluate the efficacy of new malaria vaccine candidates, we have explored the kinetics of systemic cytokine responses during the prepatent period of Plasmodium falciparum infection in 18 unvaccinated, previously malaria-naive subjects, using a highly sensitive, bead-based multiplex assay, and relate these ...
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Lang Christine - - 2007
The intracellular apicomplexan parasite Toxoplasma gondii is able to survive and persist in immunocompetent intermediate hosts for the host's life span. This is despite the induction of a vigorous humoral and -- more importantly -- cell-mediated immune response during infection. In order to establish and maintain such chronic infections, however, ...
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Carvalho E M - - 2006
Worms and asthma are associated with a type 2 immune response, but evidence has accumulated that helminth infection is negatively associated with atopy, prevalence of allergic diseases and severity of asthma. One important difference between these polarized type 2 responses is that in allergy modulation of the immunological response is ...
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Harnett W - - 2006
Long-term infection with parasitic worms is generally associated with an immunological phenotype that is Th2-like and anti-inflammatory. This phenotype is probably an unintentional consequence of molecular characteristics of worms (as free-living worms also express polarising molecules) in combination with deliberate attempts by the parasites, via molecular secretions, to modulate the ...
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Ockenhouse Christian F - - 2006
Using genome-wide expression profiles from persons either experimentally challenged with malaria-infected mosquitoes or naturally infected with Plasmodium falciparum malaria, we present details of the transcriptional changes that occur with infection and that either are commonly shared between subjects with presymptomatic and clinically apparent malaria or distinguish these two groups. Toll-like ...
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Radke Jay R - - 2006
Toxoplasma is a significant opportunistic pathogen in AIDS, and bradyzoite differentiation is the critical step in the pathogenesis of chronic infection. Bradyzoite development has an apparent tropism for cells and tissues of the central nervous system, suggesting the need for a specific molecular environment in the host cell, but it ...
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Zaccone P - - 2006
The debate on whether infection precipitates or prevents autoimmunity remains a contentious one. Recently the suggestion that some unknown microbe can be at the origin of some chronic inflammatory diseases has been countered by accumulating evidence that decreasing infection rates might have an important role to play in the rising ...
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Rauch Gisep - - 2006
Red Queen models of host-parasite coevolution are based on genotype by genotype host-parasite interactions. Such interactions require a genotype specific host defence and, simultaneously, a genotype specific parasite infectivity. Specificity is defined here as defence or infection ability successful against only a subset of genotypes of the same species. A ...
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Furze Rebecca C - - 2006
We investigated the roles of the regulatory molecules glucocorticoid-induced TNF receptor family-related protein (GITR) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) in murine infection with the nematode parasite Trichinella spiralis. Expression of GITR and CTLA-4 was rapidly upregulated on cells in the mesenteric lymph nodes and spleen, with approximately 80% ...
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Kalmbach Yvonne - - 2006
The outcome of a Plasmodium falciparum infection differs greatly between patients, ranging from an asymptomatic carrier status to the most severe characteristics influenced by activating and inhibiting immune factors. The inhibitory leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptor (LILRB1/CD85j) plays an important role in the immune response as regulator of cytotoxic T cells and ...
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Ling Yun M - - 2006
Apicomplexan protozoan pathogens avoid destruction and establish a replicative niche within host cells by forming a nonfusogenic parasitophorous vacuole (PV). Here we present evidence for lysosome-mediated degradation of Toxoplasma gondii after invasion of macrophages activated in vivo. Pathogen elimination was dependent on the interferon gamma inducible-p47 GTPase, IGTP, required PI3K ...
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Amino Rogerio - - 2006
Malaria, the disease caused by Plasmodium, kills more than 1 million people annually. Little is known of the pre-erythrocytic phase of the parasite life cycle, i.e., after the sporozoite stage is inoculated in the dermis by a mosquito and before the erythrocyte-infecting stage is released from hepatocytes. We present here ...
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Buzoni-Gatel Dominique - - 2006
Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular obligate parasite that enters the host via the gastrointestinal tract. The parasite is able to evade or subvert the immune response of its host via various mechanisms. Here, we discuss a recent in vitro study by Eric Denkers and colleagues that focused on the modulation ...
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Belkaid Yasmine - - 2006
This review discusses the roles played by natural CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells (natural Tregs) during parasitic infections. Natural Tregs may limit the magnitude of effector responses, which may result in failure to adequately control infection. However, natural Tregs also help to limit collateral tissue damage caused by vigorous antimicrobial ...
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Melo R C N - - 2006
OBJECTIVE AND DESIGN: The correlation between innate immune responses and formation of cytoplasmic lipid bodies (LBs) was investigated in vivo in inflammatory macrophages from rats infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, the intracellular parasite which causes Chagas' disease. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We used an experimental model of high-dose irradiation prior to infection, ...
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Wanyiri Jane - - 2006
Host-parasite interactions mediating attachment of Cryptosporidium spp. to host cells and invasion of the cell membrane are complex processes that involve multiple parasite and host molecules. Knowledge of the molecular basis of these processes is crucial for understanding the pathogenic mechanisms underlying infection and for designing strategies to combat cryptosporidiosis. ...
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Nahrevanian Hossein - - 2006
Nitric oxide (NO) is thought to be an important mediator and critical signaling molecule for malaria immunopathology; it is also a target for therapy and for vaccine. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is synthesized by a number of cell types under inflammatory conditions. The most relevant known triggers for its ...
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