2013
DOI: 10.1111/pim.12039
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Immunobiology of Plasmodium in liver and brain

Abstract: Malaria remains one of the most serious health problems globally, but our understanding of the biology of the parasite and the pathogenesis of severe disease is still limited. Multiple cellular effector mechanisms that mediate parasite elimination from the liver have been described, but how effector cells use classical granule-mediated cytotoxicity to attack infected hepatocytes and how cytokines and chemokines spread via the unique fluid pathways of the liver to reach the parasites over considerable distances… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 185 publications
(294 reference statements)
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“…Evidence suggests that the innate immune response plays an important role during the early phase of infection, with activated monocytes and neutrophils releasing nonspecific inflammatory mediators such as ROS and cytokines [2, 39] and exerting their roles as phagocytes and antigen-presenting cells when in contact with circulating infected RBCs [40]. Indeed, phagocytosis of infected RBCs by peripheral blood and tissue phagocytes is suggested to be the major mechanism of Plasmodium removal [41].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence suggests that the innate immune response plays an important role during the early phase of infection, with activated monocytes and neutrophils releasing nonspecific inflammatory mediators such as ROS and cytokines [2, 39] and exerting their roles as phagocytes and antigen-presenting cells when in contact with circulating infected RBCs [40]. Indeed, phagocytosis of infected RBCs by peripheral blood and tissue phagocytes is suggested to be the major mechanism of Plasmodium removal [41].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using intravital microscopy of transgenic parasites that express bioluminescent or fluorescent proteins, it is now also possible to trace the journey of parasites in vivo in tissues such as the liver, brain and spleen, which have fundamental roles in the establishment of infection, pathogenesis and clearance of infection 19,[128][129][130] . Technological advances in microscopy, such as two-photon microscopy, are providing even greater scope for imaging living tissue at the cellular level 131,132 .…”
Section: Box 2 | Engineering Malaria Parasites For Live Cell Imagingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Innate immune responses are activated, which at present are largely unexplored [54]. Surviving sporozoites migrate to the liver, where they take temporary refuge in hepatocytes [55]. There, one sporozoite can multiply within a week to 10 days to form tens of thousands of distinctly different asexual parasite forms, called merozoites.…”
Section: Malaria As the Paradigm Infectious Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%