Abstract

BackgroundMalaria is the most deadly parasitic disease in humans globally, and the long-time coexistence with malaria has left indelible marks in the human genome that are the causes of a variety of genetic disorders. Although anaemia is a common clinical complication of malaria, the root causes and mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of malarial anaemia are unclear and difficult to study in humans. Non-human primate (NHP) model systems enable the mechanistic study and quantification of underlying causative factors of malarial anaemia, and particularly the onset of severe anaemia.MethodsData were obtained in the course of Plasmodium coatneyi infections of malaria-naïve and semi-immune rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta), whose red blood cells (RBCs) were labelled in situ with biotin at the time the infections were initiated. The data were used for a survival analysis that permitted, for the first time, an accurate estimation of the lifespan of erythrocytes in macaques. The data furthermore formed the basis for the development and parameterization of a recursive dynamic model of erythrocyte turnover, which was used for the quantification of RBC production and removal in each macaque.ResultsThe computational analysis demonstrated that the lifespan of erythrocytes in macaques is 98 ± 21 days. The model also unambiguously showed that death due to senescence and parasitaemia is not sufficient to account for the extent of infection-induced anaemia. Specifically, the model permits, for the first time, the quantification of the different causes of RBC death, namely, normal senescence, age-independent random loss, parasitization, and bystander effects in uninfected cells. Such a dissection of the overall RBC removal process is hardly possible with experimental means alone. In the infected malaria-naïve macaques, death of erythrocytes by normal physiological senescence processes accounts for 20 % and parasitization for only 4 %, whereas bystander effects are associated with an astonishing 76 % of total RBC losses. Model-based comparisons of alternative mechanisms involved in the bystander effect revealed that most of the losses are likely due to a process of removing uninfected RBCs of all age classes and only minimally due to an increased rate of senescence of the uninfected RBCs.ConclusionsA new malaria blood-stage model was developed for the analysis of data characterizing P. coatneyi infections of M. mulatta. The model used a discrete and recursive framework with age-structure that allowed the quantification of the most significant pathophysiological processes of RBC removal. The computational results revealed that the malarial anaemia caused by this parasite is mostly due to a loss of uninfected RBCs by an age-independent process. The biological identity and complete mechanism of this process is not fully understood and requires further investigation.

Highlights

  • Malaria is the most deadly parasitic disease in humans globally, and the long-time coexistence with malaria has left indelible marks in the human genome that are the causes of a variety of genetic disorders

  • The results demonstrate that the destruction of uninfected red blood cells (RBCs) was the dominant process underlying malarial anaemia in the P. coatneyi infections reported by Moreno et al [14], and that the direct destruction of infected RBCs by the parasite accounted for only about 4 % of the total RBC loss

  • This work introduces a mathematical model that allows for the disentanglement of concurrent processes relating to RBC removal and malarial anaemia, based on published experimental data from a longitudinal malaria infection study with Non-human primate (NHP) [14]

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria is the most deadly parasitic disease in humans globally, and the long-time coexistence with malaria has left indelible marks in the human genome that are the causes of a variety of genetic disorders. Anaemia is a common clinical complication of malaria, the root causes and mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of malarial anaemia are unclear and difficult to study in humans. Merozoites invade and multiply within red blood cells (RBCs) every 24, 48 or 72 h, depending on the species, and new merozoite progeny are released to invade other RBCs [8]. During this cyclical process of invasion and destruction of RBCs, the symptoms and clinical complications associated with malaria emerge. This destruction, is not the predominant mechanism of RBC removal that leads to anaemia, and seems to be vastly surpassed by the destruction of uninfected RBCs (uRBCs) [9,10,11]

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