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McQueen Philip G - - 2008
The two main agents of human malaria, Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum, can induce severe anemia and provoke strong, complex immune reactions. Which dynamical behaviors of host immune and erythropoietic responses would foster control of infection, and which would lead to runaway parasitemia and/or severe anemia? To answer these questions, ...
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Bray Daniel P - - 2008
BACKGROUND: Studies of wild animals responding to their native parasites are essential if we are to understand how the immune system functions in the natural environment. While immune defence may bring increased survival, this may come at a resource cost to other physiological traits, including reproduction. Here, we tested the ...
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Richard F-J - - 2008
BACKGROUND: Immune response pathways have been relatively well-conserved across animal species, with similar systems in both mammals and invertebrates. Interestingly, honey bees have substantially reduced numbers of genes associated with immune function compared with solitary insect species. However, social species such as honey bees provide an excellent environment for pathogen ...
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Scharsack Jörn Peter - - 2007
The cestode Schistocephalus solidus is a frequent parasite of three-spined sticklebacks and has a large impact on its host's fitness. Selection pressure should therefore be high on stickleback defence mechanisms, like an efficient immune system, and also on parasite strategies to overcome these. Even though there are indications for manipulation ...
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Zaccone Paola - - 2008
As more facts emerge regarding the ways in which parasite-derived molecules modulate the host immune response, it is possible to envisage how a lack of infection by agents that once infected humans commonly might contribute to the rise in autoimmune disease. Through effects on cells of both the innate and ...
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Anthony Robert M - - 2007
Important insights have recently been gained in our understanding of how host immune responses mediate resistance to parasitic helminths and control associated pathological responses. Although similar cells and cytokines are evoked in response to infection by helminths as diverse as nematodes and schistosomes, the components of the response that mediate ...
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Morales-Montor J - - 2007
In this special issue of Parasite Immunology, the reader will find reviewed some of the hottest topics in immunoparasitology, with emphasis on the most studied parasite species in Mexico. For instance, the immunological conditions that appear favorable for the survival or destruction of the parasite in the intermediate and definitive ...
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Reyes J L - - 2007
Macrophages play crucial roles in the immune response, as they can initiate, modulate and also be final effector cells during immune responses to infections. Macrophages are derived from myeloid precursor cells in bone marrow and are widely distributed in every tissue of the body. Over the past 10 years, the ...
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Díaz Alvaro - - 2007
Metazoan parasites of mammals (helminths) belong to highly divergent animal groups and yet induce a stereotypical host response: Th2-type immunity. It has long been debated whether this response benefits the host or the parasite. We review the current literature and suggest that Th2 immunity is an evolutionarily appropriate response to ...
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Hideko Tatakihara Vera L - - 2008
Prostaglandins are known to be produced by macrophages when challenged with Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas' disease. It is not known whether these lipid mediators play a role in oxidative stress in host defenses against this important protozoan parasite. In this study, we demonstrated that inducible cyclooxygenase-mediated prostaglandin ...
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Filipe João A N - - 2007
Acquisition of partially protective immunity is a dominant feature of the epidemiology of malaria among exposed individuals. The processes that determine the acquisition of immunity to clinical disease and to asymptomatic carriage of malaria parasites are poorly understood, in part because of a lack of validated immunological markers of protection. ...
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Gowda D Channe - - 2007
Proinflammatory responses to malaria have crucial roles in controlling parasite growth and disease pathogenesis. The glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) of Plasmodium falciparum is thought to be an important factor in the induction of proinflammatory responses. The GPI induces host cellular responses mainly through Toll-like receptor (TLR)2/MyD88-mediated signaling. Knowledge of the parasite-host factors ...
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Pritchard David I - - 2007
A popular hypothesis to explain parasite survival in the presence of a pronounced T helper 2 phenotype in helminth-parasitized populations has been Fc epsilonRI blockade by parasite-induced polyclonal IgE. To begin to test the hypothesis that Fc epsilonRI-bearing cells would be refractory to activation in parasitized populations, we investigated basophil ...
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Abdel-latief M - - 2008
So far, it was unknown whether immune responses of insect eggs are inducible or suppressed by parasitism. We investigated whether transcription of immune related genes in eggs of Manduca sexta changed in response to parasitism by Trichogramma evanescens. First, using DDRT-PCR, several cDNA elements known to represent immune related M. ...
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Pinitkiatisakul S - - 2008
Real-time PCR was used to study the duration and level of parasitaemia in mice immunized with immune-stimulating complexes (iscoms) containing recombinant NcSRS2, one of the immunodominant surface antigens of Neospora caninum. After challenge infection, blood was collected daily for 9 days. During this period the amounts of parasite DNA detected ...
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Couper Kevin N - - 2007
In most models of blood-stage malaria infection, proinflammatory immune responses are required for control of infection and elimination of parasites. We hypothesized therefore that the fulminant infections caused in mice by the lethal strain of Plasmodium yoelii (17XL) might be due to failure to activate a sufficient inflammatory response. Here ...
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Kummer Shelley - - 2008
Trichomonas vaginalis is an understudied parasitic organism whose mechanisms of pathogenesis remain unclear. The adherence to host cells, the induction of host cell cytotoxicity and protease activity are all, however, thought to be contributing factors towards the development of the disease. T. vaginalis CP30 is an extracellular fraction containing four ...
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Steenhard N R - - 2007
The objective of the present study was to develop an ELISPOT method to measure parasite-specific IL-4 producing cells during experimental Ascaris suum and Trichuris suis infections in pigs. In many experimental settings it is useful to be able to measure changes in specifically induced cytokines over time at post-mRNA level; ...
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Blandin Stephanie A - - 2007
Anopheles mosquitoes are the only vectors of human malaria parasites. Mosquito-parasite interactions are critical for disease transmission and therefore are a potential target for malaria control strategies. Mosquitoes mount potent immune responses that efficiently limit proliferation of a variety of infectious agents, including microbial pathogens and malaria parasites. The recent ...
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Fetterer R H - - 2007
The developmental expression of the antigen SO7, which has been previously shown to protect chickens against infection by several Eimeria species, was investigated. Using RT-PCR, mRNA for SO7 was found to be restricted primarily to unsporulated oocysts (0 hr). Western blot (WB) analysis with an antibody to recombinant SO7 (rbSO7) ...
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Natesan Senthil Kumar A - - 2007
Immune evasion in African trypanosomes is principally mediated by antigenic variation, but rapid internalization of surface-bound immune factors may contribute to survival. Endocytosis is upregulated approximately 10-fold in bloodstream compared to procyclic forms, and surface coat remodeling accompanies transition between these life stages. Here we examined expression of endocytosis markers ...
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De Souza E M - - 2008
A2M is a broad spectrum proteinase inhibitor and cytokine carrier, besides presenting anti-apoptotic activity through the binding to its receptor, LRP. During Trypanosoma cruzi infection, apoptosis of host cells and intracellular parasites is commonly observed both in vivo and in vitro. Since plasma as well as tissue A2M levels are ...
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Guilliams Martin - - 2007
Tolerance to African trypanosomes requires the production of IFN-gamma in the early stage of infection that triggers the development of classically activated macrophages controlling parasite growth. However, once the first peak of parasitemia has been controlled, down-regulation of the type 1 immune response has been described. In this study, we ...
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Lamb Tracey J - - 2008
Wolbachia are bacteria present within the tissues of most filarial nematodes. Filarial nematode survival is known to be affected by immune responses generated during filarial nematode infection and immune responses to Wolbachia can be found in different species harbouring filarial nematode infections, including humans. Using the rodent filarial model Litomosoides ...
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Miyahira Yasushi - - 2008
Chagas' disease is caused by Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi) which was once prevalent in Central and South America. Although the recent success in Triatoma vector control has made the disease being possibly "extinct" in the near future, the development of effective preventive and therapeutic vaccines is still necessary to prevent ...
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Kreider Timothy - - 2007
Helminthic parasites can trigger highly polarized immune responses typically associated with increased numbers of CD4(+) Th2 cells, eosinophils, mast cells, and basophils. These cell populations are thought to coordinate an effective response ultimately leading to parasite expulsion, but they also play a role in the regulation of associated pathologic inflammation. ...
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Acosta Rodriguez E V - - 2007
Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas' disease, may sabotage humoral response by affecting B cells at the different stages of its development. The present review highlights the contributions of our laboratory in understanding how T. cruzi hinders B-cell generation and B-cell expansion limiting host defence and favouring its chronic ...
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Cockburn Ian A - - 2007
The observation that individuals living in malaria endemic areas fail to develop sterilizing immunity to malaria infection has led to the assumption that malaria-specific immune responses are sub-optimal. Recently, T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic mice specific for the sporozoite and blood stages of the malaria parasite have been developed. Studies ...
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Raes Geert - - 2007
A type 1 cytokine-dependent pro-inflammatory response inducing classically activated macrophages is crucial for parasite control during protozoan infections but can also contribute to the development of immunopathological disease symptoms. Accumulating evidence indicates that interleukins 4, 13 and 10, transforming growth factor-beta, immune complexes and apoptotic cells elicited during these infections ...
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Retra, K.
Schistosomes are parasitic worms that cause schistosomiasis, a chronic disease associated with a Th2 response. During the chronic phase of infection the disease is also associated with enhanced IL-10 production and suppressed T cell proliferation against parasite and third party antigens. The tegumental outer-surface structure of schistosomes is unique in ...
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Nishikawa Y - - 2007
Apoptosis has been found to help in the defence against pathogens. Infection with the obligate intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii is known to trigger host-cell apoptosis. When using a T. gondii-infected macrophage cell line, J774A.1, treatment with IFN-gamma significantly enhanced apoptosis in noninfected bystander cells while parasitized cells became relatively resistant. ...
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Wilkes C P - - 2007
A range of immune parameters was measured during a primary infection of Strongyloides ratti in its natural rat host. The immune parameters measured were interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interferon-gamma from both the spleen and mesenteric lymph node (MLN) cells; parasite-specific immunoglobulin G(1)(IgG(1)), IgG(2a) and IgG(2b) in serum and in intestinal tissue; ...
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Mueller Ann-Kristin - - 2007
Live-attenuated Plasmodium liver stages remain the only experimental model that confers complete sterile protection against malaria. Irradiation-attenuated Plasmodium parasites mediate protection primarily by CD8 T cells. In contrast, it is unknown how genetically attenuated liver stage parasites provide protection. Here, we show that immunization with uis3(-) sporozoites does not cause ...
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Muehlenbachs Atis - - 2007
Chronic inflammation during placental malaria (PM) is most frequent in first time mothers and is associated with poor maternal and fetal outcomes. In the first genome-wide analysis of the local human response to sequestered malaria parasites, we identified genes associated with chronic PM and then localized the corresponding proteins and ...
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Waterhouse Robert M - - 2007
Mosquitoes are vectors of parasitic and viral diseases of immense importance for public health. The acquisition of the genome sequence of the yellow fever and Dengue vector, Aedes aegypti (Aa), has enabled a comparative phylogenomic analysis of the insect immune repertoire: in Aa, the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae (Ag), and ...
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Iyer Jayasree Kaveri - - 2007
The severity of infections caused by the malaria parasite Plasmodium is in part due to the rapid multiplication cycles in the blood of an infected individual. A fundamental step in this phenomenon is the invasion of selected erythrocytes of the host by the parasite. The py235 rhoptry protein multigene family ...
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Stijlemans Benoît - - 2007
African trypanosomes can cause prolonged chronic infections through a mechanism of antigen variation whereby they manipulate the humoral immune system of their hosts. However, besides antigenic variation these extracellular parasites exert other immunoregulatory activities mainly mediated by innate cells in particular macrophage-like (M) cells. In this review, the modulation of ...
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Wichmann Dominic - - 2007
Plasmodium falciparum malaria affects about 500 million people worldwide and is responsible for approximately 2.5 million deaths per year. Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) is the major anchor for membrane-associated proteins of P. falciparum and GPI plays a major role as a toxin in the pathology of malaria. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis ...
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Ocaña-Morgner Carlos - - 2007
During an acute blood-stage malaria infection, T cell responses to malaria and other bystander antigens are inhibited. Plasmodium infection induces strong cytokine responses that facilitate parasite clearance but may interfere with T cell functions, as some of the soluble immune mediators induced are also general inhibitors of T cell responses. ...
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Guillou François - - 2007
Schistosoma mansoni and Echinostoma caproni are two trematode species that use different strategies (mimicry and immunosuppression, respectively) to interfere with the snail innate immune system. Parasites excretory-secretory (ES) products have been shown to play a key role in these host-parasite immune interactions. However, they remain largely uncharacterized in larval trematodes. ...
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Pillai, Smitha
Nematodes which cause filariasis have detrimental effect on humans. Strategies to eliminate this disease are based on mass treatment with drugs like ivermectin. However, they have several drawbacks such as long duration required for treatment and tenuous financial supports. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of genes required for parasitism will help ...
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Bleay Colin - - 2007
Negative density-dependent effects on the fitness of parasite populations are an important force in their population dynamics. For the parasitic nematode Strongyloides ratti, density-dependent fitness effects require the rat host immune response. By analysis of both measurements of components of parasite fitness and of the host immune response to different ...
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Carmen John C - - 2007
The modulation of apoptosis has emerged as an important weapon in the pathogenic arsenal of multiple intracellular protozoan parasites. Cryptosporidium parvum, Leishmania spp., Trypanosoma cruzi, Theileria spp., Toxoplasma gondii and Plasmodium spp. have all been shown to inhibit the apoptotic response of their host cell. While the pathogen mediators responsible ...
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Haldar Kasturi - - 2007
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Plasmodium falciparum causes the most virulent form of human malarias. It is a protozoan parasite that infects human erythrocytes and the erythrocytic stages are responsible for all symptoms and pathologies of the disease. Critical to infection is the formation of a parasitophorous vacuolar membrane at the time ...
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Coban Cevayir - - 2007
It has long been known that malaria infection causes host immune modulation by various mechanisms. However, the role of Toll-like receptors (TLRs) in mediating innate immune responses to parasite-derived components during the blood stages of malaria has only recently been described. TLRs might have an important role in pathogenesis during ...
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Stark Jaroslav - - 2007
Oscillations are surprisingly common in the immune system, both in its healthy state and in disease. The most famous example is that of periodic fevers caused by the malaria parasite. A number of hereditary disorders, which also cause periodic fevers, have also been known for a long time. Various reports ...
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Debierre-Grockiego Françoise - - 2007
Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular parasite able to both promote and inhibit apoptosis. T. gondii renders infected cells resistant to programmed cell death induced by multiple apoptotic triggers. On the other hand, increased apoptosis of immune cells after in vivo infection with T. gondii may suppress the immune response to ...
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Dubey J P - - 2007
Neospora caninum is a protozoan parasite of animals. Until 1988, it was misidentified as Toxoplasma gondii. Since its first recognition in dogs in 1984 and the description of the new genus and species Neospora caninum in 1988, neosporosis has emerged as a serious disease of cattle and dogs worldwide. Abortions ...
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Olivos-García A - - 2007
During early experimental amebic liver abscess in hamsters (EALAH), acute inflammation is primarily responsible for tissue damage. However, during the late stages of this process, the relative contribution to tissue destruction of both parasite factors and host response is unknown. In the present work, the role of the cellular immune ...
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Roy Sunando - - 2007
BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES: The effect of P. falciparum on erythrocytes has been studied for a long time at the population level but actual studies at the single cell level remain largely unexplored. The aim of this study was to address the host-parasite relationship at the single cell level under two ...
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