2015
DOI: 10.3791/52969
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An <em>In Vitro</em> Model for Measuring Immune Responses to Malaria in the Context of HIV Co-infection

Abstract: Malaria and HIV co-infection is a growing health priority. However, most research on malaria or HIV currently focuses on each infection individually. Although understanding the disease dynamics for each of these pathogens independently is vital, it is also important that the interactions between these pathogens are investigated and understood.We have developed a versatile in vitro model of HIV-malaria co-infection to study host immune responses to malaria in the context of HIV infection. Our model allows the s… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…A variation in this experimental setup employed PBMCs isolated from HIV‐infected individuals for coculture with Plasmodium‐infected red blood cells and also observed changes in the proinflammatory response to infection. In contrast to the study using experimental ex vivo infection with HIV, proinflammatory responses were reduced upon coinfection in this case . These different outcomes may reflect that the rates of productive HIV infection are much lower in patient samples as compared to experimental ex vivo infections and that the boost in proinflammatory cytokine release can only be observed if a minimal threshold of HIV replication is achieved.…”
Section: Current Experimental Studies Of Coinfection or Indirect Effecontrasting
confidence: 76%
“…A variation in this experimental setup employed PBMCs isolated from HIV‐infected individuals for coculture with Plasmodium‐infected red blood cells and also observed changes in the proinflammatory response to infection. In contrast to the study using experimental ex vivo infection with HIV, proinflammatory responses were reduced upon coinfection in this case . These different outcomes may reflect that the rates of productive HIV infection are much lower in patient samples as compared to experimental ex vivo infections and that the boost in proinflammatory cytokine release can only be observed if a minimal threshold of HIV replication is achieved.…”
Section: Current Experimental Studies Of Coinfection or Indirect Effecontrasting
confidence: 76%