Abstract

It is poorly understood how progressive brain swelling in experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) evolves in space and over time, and whether mechanisms of inflammation or microvascular sequestration/obstruction dominate the underlying pathophysiology. We therefore monitored in the Plasmodium berghei ANKA-C57BL/6 murine ECM model, disease manifestation and progression clinically, assessed by the Rapid-Murine-Coma-and-Behavioral-Scale (RMCBS), and by high-resolution in vivo MRI, including sensitive assessment of early blood-brain-barrier-disruption (BBBD), brain edema and microvascular pathology. For histological correlation HE and immunohistochemical staining for microglia and neuroblasts were obtained. Our results demonstrate that BBBD and edema initiated in the olfactory bulb (OB) and spread along the rostral-migratory-stream (RMS) to the subventricular zone of the lateral ventricles, the dorsal-migratory-stream (DMS), and finally to the external capsule (EC) and brainstem (BS). Before clinical symptoms (mean RMCBS = 18.5±1) became evident, a slight, non-significant increase of quantitative T2 and ADC values was observed in OB+RMS. With clinical manifestation (mean RMCBS = 14.2±0.4), T2 and ADC values significantly increased along the OB+RMS (p = 0.049/p = 0.01). Severe ECM (mean RMCBS = 5±2.9) was defined by further spread into more posterior and deeper brain structures until reaching the BS (significant T2 elevation in DMS+EC+BS (p = 0.034)). Quantitative automated histological analyses confirmed microglial activation in areas of BBBD and edema. Activated microglia were closely associated with the RMS and neuroblasts within the RMS were severely misaligned with respect to their physiological linear migration pattern. Microvascular pathology and ischemic brain injury occurred only secondarily, after vasogenic edema formation and were both associated less with clinical severity and the temporal course of ECM. Altogether, we identified a distinct spatiotemporal pattern of microglial activation in ECM involving primarily the OB+RMS axis, a distinct pathway utilized by neuroblasts and immune cells. Our data suggest significant crosstalk between these two cell populations to be operative in deeper brain infiltration and further imply that the manifestation and progression of cerebral malaria may depend on brain areas otherwise serving neurogenesis.

Highlights

  • Malaria remains among the most frequent and fatal infectious diseases worldwide

  • We monitored the evolution of experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) in vivo using high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with whole-brain coverage and have identified a distinct pattern of cerebral disease spread

  • When the brainstem is eventually reached, mice start to fall into a comatose state. Those findings correlate with previously published human MRI findings, which show brain swelling of the brainstem in comatose children with cerebral malaria as well as early involvement of the striatum—recently recognized to serve neurogenesis in humans

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Malaria remains among the most frequent and fatal infectious diseases worldwide. The WHO reported 207 million cases of malaria in 2013. In malaria infection animal models, such as the Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) model, a well established and widely adopted experimental system of CM (ECM) that reflects many features of human CM [19], leukocyte accumulation in the cerebral microvasculature is found consistently [20,21,22,23] These observations suggest that apart from secreted cytokines, cellular inflammatory infiltration might play an important role in CM by mediating an exacerbated immune host response targeted against the CNS [15]. Identifying trafficking pathways by which a potential inflammatory molecular and cellular response is mediated and progresses would lead to a better understanding of CM and would help to identify novel strategies of therapeutic intervention and diagnostic targets for early monitoring of beneficial effects of any such intervention

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.