Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Infants' Peripheral Blood Lymphocyte Composition Reflects Both Maternal and Post-Natal Infection with Plasmodium falciparum

  • Odilon Nouatin ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Odilon Nouatin, Komi Gbédandé

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Komi Gbédandé ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Odilon Nouatin, Komi Gbédandé

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Samad Ibitokou,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Bertin Vianou,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Parfait Houngbegnon,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Sem Ezinmegnon,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Sophie Borgella,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, MERIT UMR D216 Mère et enfant face aux infections tropicales, Paris, France

  • Carine Akplogan,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Gilles Cottrell,

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, MERIT UMR D216 Mère et enfant face aux infections tropicales, Paris, France, PRES Sorbonne Paris Cité, Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Pharmacie, Paris, France

  • Stefania Varani,

    Affiliation Unit of Microbiology, Department of Diagnostic, Experimental and Specialty Medicine, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy

  • Achille Massougbodji,

    Affiliation Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin

  • Kabirou Moutairou,

    Affiliation Département de Biochimie et de Biologie Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Bénin

  • Marita Troye-Blomberg,

    Affiliation Department of Molecular Biosciences, the Wenner-Gren Institute, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

  • Philippe Deloron,

    Affiliations Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, MERIT UMR D216 Mère et enfant face aux infections tropicales, Paris, France, PRES Sorbonne Paris Cité, Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Pharmacie, Paris, France

  • Adrian J. F. Luty ,

    Current address: IRD MERIT UMR D216 Mère et enfant face aux infections tropicales, Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Pharmacie, 4 avenue de l’Observatoire, 75006 Paris, France

    ‡ These authors also contributed equally to this work.

    Affiliation Department of Medical Microbiology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

  •  [ ... ],
  • Nadine Fievet

    fievet.nadine@ird.fr

    ‡ These authors also contributed equally to this work.

    Affiliations Centre d’Etude et de Recherche sur le Paludisme Associé à la Grossesse et à l’Enfance (CERPAGE), Faculté des Sciences de la Santé, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, MERIT UMR D216 Mère et enfant face aux infections tropicales, Paris, France, PRES Sorbonne Paris Cité, Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Pharmacie, Paris, France

  • [ view all ]
  • [ view less ]

Abstract

Maternal parasitoses modulate fetal immune development, manifesting as altered cellular immunological activity in cord blood that may be linked to enhanced susceptibility to infections in early life. Plasmodium falciparum typifies such infections, with distinct placental infection-related changes in cord blood exemplified by expanded populations of parasite antigen-specific regulatory T cells. Here we addressed whether such early-onset cellular immunological alterations persist through infancy. Specifically, in order to assess the potential impacts of P. falciparum infections either during pregnancy or during infancy, we quantified lymphocyte subsets in cord blood and in infants' peripheral blood during the first year of life. The principal age-related changes observed, independent of infection status, concerned decreases in the frequencies of CD4+, NKdim and NKT cells, whilst CD8+, Treg and Teff cells' frequencies increased from birth to 12 months of age. P. falciparum infections present at delivery, but not those earlier in gestation, were associated with increased frequencies of Treg and CD8+ T cells but fewer CD4+ and NKT cells during infancy, thus accentuating the observed age-related patterns. Overall, P. falciparum infections arising during infancy were associated with a reversal of the trends associated with maternal infection i.e. with more CD4+ cells, with fewer Treg and CD8+ cells. We conclude that maternal P. falciparum infection at delivery has significant and, in some cases, year-long effects on the composition of infants' peripheral blood lymphocyte populations. Those effects are superimposed on separate and independent age- as well as infant infection-related alterations that, respectively, either match or run counter to them.

Introduction

Infectious diseases during pregnancy affect infants’ responses to vaccination [1, 2] their susceptibility to postnatal infection [3] and their development of immunopathological disorders such as allergy [4]. These detrimental and long-lasting outcomes are the result of exposures in utero that alter foetal immune responses. Examples of diseases known to have such effects include the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, Trypanosoma cruzi, the cause of Chagas’ disease, Schistosoma spp that cause bilharzia, and Wuchereria bancrofti, one of the species of nematode worm responsible for filariasis [58].

Malaria due to P. falciparum causes an estimated 584 000 deaths per year in African children and is also responsible for severe morbidity in pregnant women (WHO 2014). Sequestration and massive accumulation of infected erythrocytes in the placenta is the primary pathological phenomenon that characterizes pregnancy-associated malaria (PAM) [9]. PAM leads to a higher risk of maternal and foetal anemia, intra-uterine growth retardation, low birth weight and prematurity [10].

It is now well-established that P. falciparum infection of the mother during pregnancy will also impact subsequent weight and growth development in early life [11, 12]. PAM also influences susceptibility to malaria [13, 14] and to other infections [15] in early life, suggesting long-lasting post-natal effects of PAM. The immunological mechanisms that establish and maintain what has been termed the ‘tolerant phenotype’ phenomenon with respect to PAM and malaria in infancy are not well understood [1]. That PAM does demonstrably affect immune functions in the newborn has nevertheless been reported in several studies, characterized by

  1. modulation of immunological responses at birth (in cord blood) as well as during infancy and childhood in those born to mothers with placental infection at delivery [1618];
  2. the presence of parasite antigen-specific memory and regulatory T cells in cord blood from exposed children [1921],
  3. larger populations of T regulatory CD4+ cells (Treg) in cord blood from offspring of women with PAM when compared with those of uninfected women [19, 22].

During childhood, the proportion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells increases, attaining a profile resembling that of adults by 5 years of age [23]). CD4+ T helper (Th) cells are mainly involved in the activation of other immune cells to construct an immune response, while CD8+ T cells actively eliminate infected cells through their cytotoxic properties. An increased proportion of CD4- T cells (comprising mostly CD8+ cells) before the age of 5 years, whilst the proportion of CD4+ T cells was stable during this period, has also been reported [24]. These fluctuations in the relative numbers of CD4+ and CD8+ cells during early life may be a reflection of a continuous redistribution among these subsets throughout life [25].

Treg suppress antigen-specific responses in vivo and in vitro and are involved in the control of autoimmune responses. The frequency of Treg has been reported to increase in P. falciparum-infected adults with a dose-dependent effect of parasite load [2629]. During foetal and early life, the development of Treg is also crucial to suppress foetal anti-maternal immunity and in the maintenance of foetal self-tolerance [30]. These cells produce large amounts of IL-10 [31] [32], and inhibit the production of Th1 cytokines in monocytes, macrophages, T cells and natural killer (NK) cells. Treg have also been shown to play a role in the downmodulation of NK cells’ activities [33].

In humans, two distinct NK cell populations have been identified based on differential CD16 and CD56 expression. The majority of NK cells in peripheral blood are NKdim (CD56low CD16high) with cytotoxicity as their main effector function. The minor population is defined as NKbright (CD56high CD16low) and favours cytokine production [34]. It has been shown that NK cells from cord blood are phenotypically and functionally mature [35]’ and able to produce interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and proliferate in response to IL-2, in a manner comparable to those of adults. NK cells purportedly play an important role in early immunity against malaria, being among the first cells in peripheral blood to produce protective IFN-γ in response to P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes [36, 37]. Further, IFN-γ-producing NK cells in the placenta have been reported to exert a protective role against PAM [38]. The expansion of a subset of T cells expressing NK cell markers, NKT cells [39], has been reported in peripheral blood during severe P. falciparum infection [40] and in the livers of mice in a rodent model of malaria infection, where these cells were also associated with anti-parasitic activity [41]. NKT cells are normally present in very low numbers in peripheral blood, but they are activated in utero [42], likely contributing to the control of foetal Th2 responses [43].

Thus, different cellular components of the innate immune system, including Treg, NK and NKT cells, are known to be associated with putatively protective responses against P. falciparum. However, prospective studies of the impact of PAM on the profile and function of these cells in infants have yet to be reported. The aim of the study described here was thus to determine the phenotypic profiles of different circulating lymphocyte populations of infants born to mothers with or without PAM and to evaluate prospectively whether P. falciparum infection of the mother during pregnancy or of the infant would affect the profiles of these cells during the first year of life.

Materials and Methods

Ethics statement

The study was approved by the ethics committees of the Faculty of Health Sciences (University of Abomey-Calavi, Benin) and of the Research Institute for Development (IRD) in France. Written informed consent was obtained from all women or guardians on behalf of the minors/children included in the study.

Study design

The STOPPAM project (Strategies to Prevent Pregnancy Associated Malaria) was carried out in Benin and Tanzania between November 2008 and April 2011. Detailed descriptions of the study sites, demographics of study populations, study design and conduct have been published previously [44]. In Benin, the study took place in a high malaria transmission area located 70 km west of the commercial capital, Cotonou. The entomological inoculation rate estimated in a neighbouring area is 35–60 infective bites per person per year [45]. Three dispensaries were involved in enrolling pregnant women with a gestational age less than 24 weeks: Come, Akodeha and Ouedeme Pedah. Women enrolled in the study had monthly clinical and parasitological follow-up assessments until delivery, and received intermittent preventive treatment with sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine during scheduled antenatal visits, according to national policy in Benin. Women with a diagnosis of clinical malaria (temperature ≥37.5°C and positive malaria rapid diagnostic test, RDT) received a treatment regimen of quinine. In case of clinical symptoms between antenatal visits (ANV), women were encouraged to attend the maternity clinic to receive care.

As part of the STOPPAM project, 217 pregnant women were selected on the basis of their P. falciparum infection histories (uninfected during pregnancy, n = 99; infected during pregnancy but uninfected at delivery, n = 71; infected at delivery, n = 47); following delivery, the infants of these mothers were followed-up every two weeks from birth to 12 months of age. The follow-up of infants included routine tests to detect P. falciparum, clinical assessments and growth measurements, details of all of which have been published previously (Fig 1) [46]. To perform immunological studies, 10 ml of cord blood were collected at delivery, while 2 ml peripheral blood samples were obtained at 3, 6 and 12 months of age. Samples were processed at the laboratory of the Research Center for Malaria in Pregnancy and Infancy (CERPAGE). Infants for whom fewer than 3 blood samples were collected during the follow-up period were excluded from the study as well as infants whose mothers tested positive for HIV or had an unknown HIV serostatus.

thumbnail
Fig 1. Flow diagram of birth cohort study.

217 pregnant women were enrolled under 24 weeks of gestation and their infants were longitudinally followed-up from birth to 12 months of age. For the Treg/Teff part: 59 newborns were excluded (52 newborns < 3 blood samples collected and 7 newborns HIV+ or unknown HIV serostatus in the mother). Data from 158 infants were included for analyses. For the CD4, CD8, NK part: 67 newborns were excluded (60 newborns < 3 blood samples collected and 7 newborns HIV+ or unknown HIV serostatus in the mother). Data from 150 infants were included for analyses.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.g001

P. falciparum infection status

Clinical and parasitological assessments were performed at each ANV in mothers and during the follow-up of infants. Parasites were detected by thick blood smear (TBS). Briefly, smears were prepared, stained with Giemsa and examined by two experienced laboratory technicians for the presence and density of parasites. Smears were considered negative if no asexual stage Plasmodium parasite was detected by counting 500 leucocytes. Parasites were counted against 200 leukocytes and parasite density was estimated assuming 8000 leukocytes/μl of blood. At delivery, TBS were made from peripheral, placental and cord blood samples. Infection with P. falciparum in the mothers at delivery was defined by the presence of parasites in placental and/or maternal peripheral blood.

Immunophenotyping

The monoclonal antibodies (mAb) used for T- and NK-cell labeling were the following: anti-CD8-FITC, anti-CD4-PerCP, anti-CD3-APC, anti-CD56-PE antibodies (all BD Biosciences). For Treg and CD4+ T effector cell (Teff) labeling anti-CD4-PerCP, anti-CD25-FITC, anti-CD127-PE and anti-Foxp3-APC monoclonal antibodies were used (BD Biosciences and eBioscience).

In a first step, 5μl of FcR blocking reagent (Miltenyi Biotec, Cologne, Germany) were added to 100μl of whole blood ex vivo and incubated for 15 min at 4°C. Cells were then specifically labeled by adding 5μl of each mAb, lightly vortexed and then incubated for 30 min at 4°C in the dark. Two ml of Facs Lysing buffer (BD Biosciences) were then added and cells incubated for a further 15 min at room temperature, in the dark. After spin-washing twice with PBS 3% FCS, at least 200,000 cells were then acquired on a flow cytometer (BD FacsCalibur).

Treg and Teff labeling was performed according to the manufacterer’s recommendation (eBioscience). Briefly, 1 ml whole blood ex vivo was washed with PBS-3% Foetal Bovin Serum (FBS). After washing, 8 μl of anti-CD25-FITC, 6 μl of anti-CD127-PE and 6μl of anti-CD4-PerCP antibodies were added. Cells were incubated for 25 min at 4°C. Red blood cells were then lysed by adding Facs Lysing buffer and cells incubated for 15 min in the dark. After spin-washing with PBS, cells were incubated overnight with Fix-Perm buffer (eBioscience), then washed with Perm-Wash Buffer (eBioscience). Cells were then incubated in Perm-Wash Buffer with 2% rat serum (eBioscience) for 15 minutes in the dark, followed by the addition of 10μl of anti-Foxp3-APC and incubated for a further 15 minutes in the dark. After two spin-washes with Perm-Wash Buffer and PBS 3% FCS, at least 1,000,000 cells were acquired.

Treg (CD4+CD25+CD127-) and Teff (CD4+CD25+CD127+) cells were gated from the whole lymphocyte population (S1 Fig). CD4+ and CD8+ were gated on CD3+ cells, whilst NK cells were characterized as CD3-CD56+ cells and NKT cells were defined as CD3+CD56+ cells. For the purposes of our study, NKdim cells were defined as CD3- cells with weak expression of CD56, whereas NKbright cells were also CD3- but with strong expression of CD56. Levels of expression of Foxp3 were evaluated with a relative value (RV) corresponding to the MFI of Foxp3 in the Treg (or Teff) divided by the MFI of FoxP3 in the naïve T cell population (CD4+CD25-CD127+)

Statistical analysis

The association between T- and NK-cell frequencies and infant age was investigated by using analyses of variances for repeated measures.

To examine the contribution of PAM and/or infant plasmodial infection to T- and NK-cell frequencies, the first set of analyses proceeded as follows: for each phenotype frequency we built a multivariate linear mixed model (LMM) that takes into account the correlation between repeated measurements as well as other potential confounders in the relationship between infection and the phenotype frequency. We proceeded in two steps; first a univariate model investigated the association between baseline characteristics and T-/NK-cell frequencies. Baseline characteristics were gravidity, maternal anaemia (Hb < 11 g/dl), prematurity (<37 weeks), low birth weight (< 2500 g) and infant gender. Variables showing a p-value < 0.2 were selected for the multivariate model (second step).

We built 3 variables related to maternal plasmodial infections as follows: (i) infection before the third trimester of pregnancy, (ii) infection during the third trimester of pregnancy but more than 10 days before delivery, (iii) infection from 10 days prior to delivery up to and including delivery. Designation of the latter group was based on the premise that infections detected during an emergency visit occurring 10 days or less before delivery, and therefore treated, were too close in time to delivery to be separable from it, and because most of those concerned were also found to be infected at delivery.

We also built 3 variables related to infections during infancy as follows: (i) those occurring before three months of age, (ii) those occurring between 3 and 6 months of age, (iii) those occurring between 6 and 12 months of age. All the variables related to P. falciparum infection were included in the multivariate model with the baseline characteristics selected at the univariate step. The final multivariate model retained all the variables related to P. falciparum infection along with the baseline characteristics showing significance at the 0.05 level.

To graphically illustrate the predicted effect of maternal infection on the phenotype frequencies of infants, we then computed the mean predicted phenotype frequencies of infants born from uninfected mothers at each time-point, as well as those of the same infants if they were born to an infected mother.

In a second set of analyses, the impact of infant P. falciparum infection on their T-/NK-cell frequencies was examined through three questions. Does infant P. falciparum infection before 3 months of age have a significant effect on the T-/NK-cell responses at 3 months? Does infant P. falciparum infection between 3 and 6 months of age have a significant effect on their T-/NK-cell responses at 6 months? Does infant P. falciparum infection between 6 and 12 months of age have a significant effect on the T-cell/NK-cell responses at 12 months? To answer each question we employed three linear regression models (at 3 months, 6 months and 12 months). The final models were obtained after adjusting for maternal P. falciparum infection, gravidity, sex, prematurity and LBW.

In a third set of analyses we aimed to identify whether T-/NK-cell frequencies could affect the occurrence of infection during the ensuing months. To achieve this aim we employed a logistic mixed model where the dependent variable was the time-dependent binary variable “occurrence of infection between 2 consecutive measurement of the T-/NK-cell frequencies” (i.e. infection arising before 3 months of age, infection occurring between 3 and 6 months of age, and infection occurring between 7 and 12 months of age). This dependent variable was regressed on the T-/NK-cell frequencies in 2 different ways: in a first model we determined whether phenotype frequencies at birth were associated with the occurrence of infection during the first 12 months of age; in this model the dependent “infection occurence” variable was regressed on the T-/NK-cell frequencies in cord blood. In a second model, we built a time-dependent covariate “T-cell/NK-cell frequencies at the previous measurement”, so that, for infection occurring prior to 3 months of age, we considered the T-/NK-cell frequencies in cord blood cells, for occurrence of infection between 3 and 6 months of age we considered T-/NK-cell frequencies in blood cells obtained at 3 months of age and for occurrence of infection between 7 and 12 months of age we considered T-/NK-cell frequencies in blood cells obtained at 6 months of age. As in the previous analyses, potential confounders were first analyzed in a univariate model and then in a multivariate model. The models allowed estimation of the adjusted values of the phenotype frequencies (for any set of covariates) of all infants at each time-point.

Statistical significance in all multivariate analyses was considered if p < 0.05. All analyses were performed using the R statistical package (R Development Core Team; R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria; http://www.R-project.org) and graphs made with graphPad (Prism 5.0).

Results

Characteristics of the study population

Between November 2008 and April 2011, 217 mother/infant pairs were enrolled in the study (Fig 1) but of these 59 were excluded due to insufficient numbers of blood samples (52) and HIV sero-status (7 either HIV+ or unknown). The characteristics of the 158 pairs retained for the analysis presented here are presented in Table 1. Women had a mean age of 26.8 years (95% CI 25.9–27.7), whilst 27 (17.1%) were primigravidae and 18 (11.4%) had anemia (Hb<11g/dL) at delivery.

thumbnail
Table 1. Characteristics of the study population (n = 158 mother/infant pairs).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.t001

Infections before the third trimester of pregnancy were detected in 50 (32%) women, whilst 32 (20%) were infected during the third trimester of pregnancy, and in 38 (24%) women infections occurred within 10 days of or at delivery. The latter group of women infected 10 days before or at delivery comprised women infected at delivery and women shown to be infected close to delivery when attending an emergency visit; most of the women belonging to the latter group were also found to be infected at delivery. Babies' mean birth weight was 3053g (2987–3119).

Variations in T- and NK cell frequencies according to age in the first year of life

There was a significant effect of infant age on the T lymphocyte profiles during the first year of life. Thus the frequency of CD4+ cells was higher at birth and decreased with age, while the frequency of CD8+ cells was lower at birth and increased with age; the CD4+/CD8+ ratio consequently decreased with age (Fig 2). Despite the overall decline in CD4+ cells, the frequencies of Treg and of Teff increased between 0 and 12 months of age, although the Treg/Teff ratio decreased with infant’s age, suggesting that Teff increased more rapidly than Treg (Fig 2). Foxp3 was detected in Treg and to a lesser extent in Teff, with a clearly higher level of expression in Treg. The subset of Treg with the highest levels of expression of CD25 expressed the highest levels of Foxp3 (Fig 2), a key transcription factor that is required for development, maintenance, and function of these cells [47], suggesting a Treg cell subpopulation with specific immune function. With increasing age, the relative expression of Foxp3 increased in Teff and decreased Treg. In the CD25high subpopulation of Treg the relative level of Foxp3 expression increased from birth to 6 months of age but declined thereafter (Fig 2). The frequencies of all NK cell subpopulations decreased with age (Fig 2). With the exception of the CD25high subpopulation of Treg all of these age-dependent variations were shown to be statistically significant (p<0.001) firstly in analyses of variance for repeated measures (Fig 2), and subsequently in multivariate analyses (Tables 2 and 3).

thumbnail
Fig 2. Frequencies of cell subsets in infants' peripheral blood during the first year of life.

Curves include dots representing mean with SEM (standard error of the mean). The statistical significance of differences indicated refers to analyses of variances for repeated measures. ***, p <0.001.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.g002

thumbnail
Table 2. Multivariate (LMM) analyses of alterations in circulating T- and NK-cell subset frequencies in peripheral blood as a function of infants’ age and of P. falciparum infection at delivery.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.t002

thumbnail
Table 3. Multivariate (LMM) analyses of alterations in circulating T- and NK-cell subset frequencies in peripheral blood as a function of infants’ age and of P. falciparum infection at delivery.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.t003

Thus, we observed variations in the frequency of T- and NK-cell subsets within the first year of life, with an overall decrease of CD4, NKdim and NKT cells and an increase of CD8, Treg and Teff over time.

Maternal P. falciparum infection at delivery influences the immune cell profile of infants

Next, we examined whether maternal P. falciparum infection could influence the frequencies of lymphocytes in the offspring.

Univariate analyses showed that P. falciparum infection before the third trimester of pregnancy was associated only with a decreased frequency of NKdim in infants (data not shown), whilst infection during the third trimester of pregnancy had no effect on any parameter (data not shown). In contrast, maternal P. falciparum infection at delivery was associated with several alterations in infant’s lymphocyte populations (S1 Table, Fig 3). Most notable were the increased frequencies of both Treg and of CD8+ cells throughout infancy but, conversely, reduced frequencies of both CD4+ and NKT cells (Fig 3). Further, maternal infection at delivery was associated with an increased frequency of infant NKdim cells at birth, but no effect was seen on NKbright frequencies.

thumbnail
Fig 3. Frequencies of cell subsets in infants' peripheral blood over time segregated on the basis of presence or absence of maternal infection at delivery.

(white for negative and hatched for maternal infection). Curves include dots representing mean with SEM (standard error of the mean).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.g003

The results of multivariate analyses of the effects of maternal infection at delivery are illustrated in Tables 2 and 3 with a graphical depiction in Fig 4 of an adjusted model, based on the multivariate LMM analysis. The significantly increased frequencies of CD8+ cells in infants at birth, 3 and 6 months of age as well as increased proportions of Treg in infants at 3 months of age were confirmed in the multivariate analyses (Fig 4). In addition, the significantly reduced frequencies of CD4+ cells in infants at 3 and 6 months of age and lower NKT cell frequencies at birth, 6 and 12 months of age (Fig 4) were also confirmed. A significant increase in the frequency of infant NKdim cells was shown at birth, but significantly lower frequencies were present at 3 months of age (Fig 4).

thumbnail
Fig 4. Adjusted profiles of lymphocyte frequencies in infants during the first year of life according to P. falciparum exposure in utero.

Values are derived from residuals in the multivariate LMM model. The statistical significance of differences indicated refers to those presented in Tables 2 and 3. *, p <0.05.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.g004

In summary, maternal infection at delivery had a significant effect on the profile of immune cells of the infant, with increased frequencies of Treg and CD8+ cells and a reduced percentage of CD4+ and NKT cells. Accordingly, the CD4/CD8 ratio was also reduced over time in infants born to mothers that were infected close to or at delivery.

P. falciparum infection in infants impacts on the immune cell profile

We next evaluated the effect of P. falciparum infections in infants on their immune cell profile during the first year of life. (S1 Table & Table 4). We observed that infants infected before 3 months of age had higher frequencies of CD4+ and lower frequencies of CD8+ cells than those not infected in the same period. In addition, infants infected between 3 and 12 months of age exibited a lower frequency of Treg than those uninfected in the same period as well as a lower frequency of Treg expressing CD25high in infants infected between 3 and 6 months of age by univariate analysis (S1 Table). In the logistic mixed model (Table 4), the impact of infant P. falciparum infection on their T-/NK-cell frequencies was examined prospectively according to their infection histories 3 months prior to blood sampling at 3, 6 and 12 months. At 3 months, those infected previously had more CD4+ and fewer CD8+ cells. At 6 months, infants infected previously had lower relative values of FoxP3 in Treg and in TregCD25high. At 12 months infants infected previously had a tendency towards higher frequencies of NKT cells but lower frequencies of Treg (Table 4).

thumbnail
Table 4. A logistic mixed model to evaluate the impact of infant P. falciparum infection on the frequencies of circulating lymphocyte sub-types.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.t004

Immunological predictors of the occurrence of P. falciparum in infants

Finally, we wanted to determine whether the varying frequencies of the cell populations we investigated were associated with a higher probability of P. falciparum infection in infancy.

Firstly, we assessed whether cord blood cell frequencies were predictive of P. falciparum infection during infancy. In univariate analysis, lower cord blood Teff but higher CD4+ cell frequencies were associated with an increased risk of P. falciparum infection during the first year of life (Table 5). In multivariate analysis, only the association with a significantly lower frequency of Teff remained.

thumbnail
Table 5. T and NK cell cord blood frequencies as immunological predictors of malaria in infants.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.t005

We next examined the impact of cell frequencies at specific time-points on the occurrence of P. falciparum infection in the ensuing months of infancy. Univariate analysis showed that higher proportions of Treg, Teff and CD8+ cells and lower proportions of CD4+ and NK cells were significantly associated with an increased risk of P. falciparum infection in the first year of life. Multivariate analysis showed that lower proportions of Teff, CD4+, NK cells and higher proportions of CD8+ cells were significantly associated with an increased risk of developing P. falciparum infection during the first year of life (Table 6).

thumbnail
Table 6. T-/NK-cell frequencies and the occurrence of malaria during the first 12 months of life.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.t006

Discussion

The characterization of factors associated with increased susceptibility of infants to P. falciparum infection during the first year of life is a priority in the development of a vaccine against malaria. Here, we performed a longitudinal study of immune cell profiles in the first year of life of a large cohort of infants born to mothers with varying histories of infection during pregnancy.

We observed significant age-related changes in the frequencies of CD4+, CD8+, Treg, Teff, NK and NKT cells from birth to 12 months of age. Those age-related changes were thus taken into consideration in multivariate analyses assessing the impact of P. falciparum exposure in utero or infection during the first year of life on infants' immune cell frequencies.

It was, firstly, notable that the CD4+ cell frequency was highest at birth and then declined over the ensuing 12 months whilst the reverse was seen for CD8+ cell frequencies. The decline of CD4+ cell frequency in relation to age contrasts with the stable numbers reported by some [24], but is consistent with the decline seen in older-age children (1–13 years) reported by others [48, 49]. Similarly, the increasing CD8+ cell frequency during the first 12 months of life is consistent with some but not all previous reports [24, 49]. The disparities in reported findings may simply reflect heterogeneity of the different study populations. Mechnistically, declining numbers of CD4+ T cells during the first year of life may be explained by apoptosis [50] an age-dependent phenomenon, as cord blood lymphocytes are less sensitive to TNF-α-induced apoptosis than aged T cells [51]. Alternatively or additionally, it could reflect migration of Treg out of the circulation to the gut, which is the primary site of Treg stimulation in responses to exogenous antigens during the first 18 month of life through specific homing receptors expressed specifically at birth [52]. Also, it has been reported that neonatal CD8+ T cells proliferate more than CD4+ T cells as CD8+ T cells are more sensitive to IL-7 than CD4+ T cells, a process that decreases during the first years of life [5355].

The fact that the frequencies of Treg and Teff increased from birth to 12 months of age—in marked contrast to the overall decline of CD4+ T cells, it should be noted—is likely an indication of the development of infant immunity through the first year of life. The increased Treg frequency and increased relative expression of FoxP3 in the CD25high subpopulation of Treg during the first year of life are in line with studies reporting increased proportions of FoxP3 T cells in peripheral blood soon after birth compared to cord blood [52, 56]. Treg maturation and their suppressive function is FoxP3-dependent. It has been demonstrated that cord blood cells express lower levels of Foxp3 compared to adult cells and that this contributes to the immature nature of neonatal immunity [5759].

The two functionally distinct NK-cell subpopulations, cytotoxic CD56dim NK cells and cytokine-producing CD56bright NK cells, showed contrasting profiles, with a gradual decrease of the NK CD56dim and increasing NK CD56bright during the first year of life. Others have reported similar findings [24]. NK cells play a major role in innate immune responses that are relatively more important in early life when adaptive immunity has yet to develop, possibly explaining the high frequency of cytotoxic NKdim cells present at birth. NKT cells are present at comparable frequencies in cord blood and adult peripheral blood mononuclear cells [60]. We have not found data other than our own concerning the gradual decrease in NKT frequencies from birth to 6 months of age. NKT cells in utero are unique in acquiring a memory-activated phenotype through a contact with a natural ligand [42], suggesting that these NKT cells already exert an important immune regulatory function before birth and in self tolerance. Decreased post-natal NKT frequencies may be related to the overall change in the frequency distibution of different lymphocyte phenotypes.

In the context of the influence of maternal infection with P. falciparum on neonatal profiles, perhaps the most notable finding concerns the changes in CD4+ and CD8+ cells. Children born to mothers infected at delivery exhibited a skewed profile of CD4+ and CD8+ cell subsets, with an increased frequency of CD8+ and a reduced frequency of CD4+ cells at 3 and 6 months of age and consequently a continuous decline in the CD4/CD8 ratio between birth and 12 months of age. These patterns, as indicated earlier, are superimposed on the age-related trends—going in the same direction—for these same two cell types, suggesting possible additive effects of age and maternal infection on CD4+ and CD8+ cell profiles during infancy. CD4+ T cells are considered essential triggers of early and effective NK-cell IFN-γ responses upon contact with P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes [61]. They are, furthermore, required for generation and maintenance of protective antibody-mediated responses to P. falciparum and other pathogens [62]. Excessive loss of such cells during infancy may therefore play a pivotal role in the enhanced susceptibility to infection suffered by those born to mothers with placental infection.

The Treg and Teff frequencies were similar in cord blood of newborns born to mothers with P. falciparum infection compared to those born to uninfected mothers, again consistent with some previous studies [22, 63] but not with others [20, 64, 65]. In utero exposure to P. falciparum at delivery was nevertheless associated with significantly higher frequencies of Treg at three months of age. Persistence of Treg following in utero contact with non-self antigens is a reported phenomenon [30, 66]. Several studies have shown that ex vivo stimulation of cord blood cells with P. falciparum blood stage antigens reveals populations of CD4+ T cells with a Treg phenotype [67]. Such cells, in cord blood of offspring born to women with placental malaria, have been shown to produce more IL-10 compared to cells of those born to mothers without placental malaria [64, 65]. Compatible with these findings, others have shown that a soluble extract of P. falciparum-infected red blood cells induces the differentiation of polyclonally-activated Treg CD4+ T cells with strong suppressive activity, and that this activation was mediated by membrane bound TGF-β on the Treg cells leading to immune evasion and reduced pro-inflammatory responses [29].

Resource constraints meant that we were unable to assess the functional characteristics of the different T cell subsets that we quantified, but we hypothesize that higher numbers of Treg in infants born to mothers infected at delivery would be associated with enhanced immunoregulatory activity and with concomitantly reduced pro-inflammatory responses. Such a profile would likely contribute to the increased susceptibility to infections observed in children born to infected mothers [1315, 20]. Treg induced during infection are thought to limit the magnitude of subsequent parasite-specific IFN-γ responses [68]. Prenatal exposure to plasmodial blood-stage antigens induces Treg that, in some newborns, primarily suppress Th1- type recall responses [2, 20]. Thus, the persistence of such Treg post-natally may affect the susceptibility of children both to P.falciparum and to other infections. We did not observe any alteration of the relative expression of FoxP3 in Treg or Teff. It could have been more informative to determine the expression of other functional markers such as CTLA-4 and/or TNFRII. It is known that Treg can dampen NK-cell activation/ proliferation and cytotoxic activity [69, 70] as well as NKT cell proliferation and cytokine production [39]. In line with these observations, and in association with the increased Treg frequency in infants born to mothers infected at delivery, we found a reduced frequency of circulating NKT cells in infants of mothers infected with P. falciparum close to or at delivery as compared to the other group at birth. Further, maternal infection close to or at delivery was associated with an increased frequency of infant NKdim cells at birth, and to lower frequencies of these cells at 3 months of age. These observations are suggestive of an early inflammatory response being needed to protect against plasmodial parasites. Relatively diminished pro-inflammatory activity—as reflected by cord plasma cytokine profiles—is associated with more severe clinical outcomes of infection with P. falciparum during infancy [71, 72]. Assessing plasma cytokine profiles in our cohort of infants is thus of obvious interest in the context of the findings we present here as well as those we have previously reported [73].

Infection with P. falciparum in infancy also altered the immune cell profile, with infants infected before 3 months of age having a higher frequency of CD4+ T cells and a lower frequency of CD8+ T cells. It should be stressed that this, again, is a pattern superimposed on what is, in this case, the markedly contrasting background of an overall age-related decline in CD4+ cells and an increase in CD8+ cells, a pattern that, as was noted earlier, placental infection at delivery further exacerbated. Again, we have no specific functional data on which to base any interpretation of this observation. It is nevertheless plausible to suppose that any infection-induced expansion of a population of CD4+ T cells in such infants will primarily comprise atypical, transitional cells that have not undergone full maturation. Theory suggests that such effector-type cells induced in infancy remain in a state of anergy with little if any functional anti-pathogen activity [74].

Reduced Treg frequencies were observed in infants who were infected between 6 and 12 months of age, and the relative expression of FoxP3 in the CD4+CD25+ and CD25high CD4+ subpopulation was reduced in infants who were infected between 3 and 6 months of age. These findings contrast with the increase in number of Treg in the peripheral blood of older children and adults during P. falciparum infections [2629]. The data we present here comprise observations after the infection event, however, and may thus simply reflect the physiological contraction of pathogen-induced responses following clinical recovery and clearance of the parasite.

One of the major limitations of our study concerns the absence of data with respect to co-infections such as, for example, chronic maternal helminth infections. Such infections are known to affect anti-plasmodial immune responses [7577]. Furthermore, contact in utero with maternally-derived filariasis antigens reportedly modifies cord blood cell responses such that they display a predominantly anti-inflammatory profile [78]. On the other hand, the prevalence of (soil-transmitted) helminth infections in the first 12 months of life is likely less than 10% [79], and thus any possible influence on the lymphocyte profiles we observed here is likely to have been minimal.

In conclusion, we have found that maternal infection with P. falciparum at delivery, but not earlier in pregnancy profoundly affects the immune cell profile of their babies, with, in some cases, effects lasting at least 1 year. Cells of both the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system are affected. These findings echo our observations on TLR-mediated innate immune responses of the same group of infants [73]. Infection at delivery, but not earlier in pregnancy, was associated with significantly higher TLR3-mediated IL-6 and IL-10 responses in the first 3 months of life, and with significantly higher TLR3-/TLR7/8-/TLR9-mediated TNF-α and TLR9-mediated IL-10 responses at 6 or 12 months of age. Whether those alterations, along with the maternal infection-related relative increase in CD8+ cells and relative decrease in CD4+ cells in the post-natal period that we report here, have a direct bearing on infants' immune response to infection remains an open question. Plausibly, such changes could form the basis for an explanation of the increased susceptibility to malaria of infants born to mothers with infections at delivery, but proof of causality awaits further study.

Supporting Information

S1 Fig. The gating strategies for Treg (CD4+CD25+CD127-) and Teff (CD4+CD25+CD127+).

Cell frequencies were determined as a percentage from the whole lymphocyte population, and relative FoxP3 expression level determined as a function of FoxP3 expresssion by naïve CD4+ T cells (CD4+CD25-).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.s001

(TIFF)

S1 Table. Univariate analysis of alterations in circulating T- and NK-cell subset frequencies in cord/infant blood as a function of P. falciparum infection detected either in the mother at delivery or during infancy

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139606.s002

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to all women and infant who participated in the study. We thank all the field and administration staffs of Akodeha, Comé central and Ouedèmé Pedah health centers for their valuable contribution. We particularly thank Jacqueline Affedjou, Jean-Claude Sagbo, Bernadette Gandounou, Gildas Gbaguidi and all field staff in the site of STOPPAM for their hard work and dedication to this study. We would like to thank Bich-Tram Huynh, Sebastien Dechavanne and Valérie Briand for database management, Aurax Fernando, Charles Ahouansou, Pépin Kounou, Honoré Kounou, and Darius Sossou for their lab contribution; Thor Theander and Nicaise Ndam for their contribution to the design of the study.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: ON KG SI AM PD KM MTB AJFL NF. Performed the experiments: ON KG SI BV SE SB CA NF. Analyzed the data: PH GC. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: ON KG SI BV SE CA NF. Wrote the paper: ON KG SI SV MTB PD AJFL NF. Designed and supervised the immunoassays: ON KG SI AJFL NF. Carried out the immunoassays: ON KG SI BV SE CA NF.

References

  1. 1. Labeaud AD, Malhotra I, King MJ, King CL, King CH. Do antenatal parasite infections devalue childhood vaccination? PLoS neglected tropical diseases. 2009;3(5):e442. Epub 2009/05/30. pmid:19478847; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2682196.
  2. 2. Malhotra I, Dent A, Mungai P, Wamachi A, Ouma JH, Narum DL, et al. Can prenatal malaria exposure produce an immune tolerant phenotype? A prospective birth cohort study in Kenya. PLoS Med. 2009;6(7):e1000116. Epub 2009/07/29. pmid:19636353; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2707618.
  3. 3. Dauby N, Goetghebuer T, Kollmann TR, Levy J, Marchant A. Uninfected but not unaffected: chronic maternal infections during pregnancy, fetal immunity, and susceptibility to postnatal infections. The Lancet infectious diseases. 2012;12(4):330–40. Epub 2012/03/01. S1473-3099(11)70341-3 [pii] pmid:22364680.
  4. 4. Thornton CA, Macfarlane TV, Holt PG. The hygiene hypothesis revisited: role of materno-fetal interactions. Current allergy and asthma reports. 2010;10(6):444–52. Epub 2010/09/03. pmid:20809222.
  5. 5. Cuna WR, Choque AG, Passera R, Rodriguez C. Pro-inflammatory cytokine production in chagasic mothers and their uninfected newborns. J Parasitol. 2009;95(4):891–4. Epub 2009/01/24. GE-1927 [pii] pmid:19161249.
  6. 6. Kurtis JD, Higashi A, Wu HW, Gundogan F, McDonald EA, Sharma S, et al. Maternal Schistosomiasis japonica is associated with maternal, placental, and fetal inflammation. Infection and immunity. 2011;79(3):1254–61. Epub 2010/12/15. IAI.01072-10 [pii] pmid:21149589; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3067505.
  7. 7. Malhotra I, Mungai PL, Wamachi AN, Tisch D, Kioko JM, Ouma JH, et al. Prenatal T cell immunity to Wuchereria bancrofti and its effect on filarial immunity and infection susceptibility during childhood. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2006;193(7):1005–13. Epub 2006/03/07. pmid:16518763.
  8. 8. Vekemans J, Truyens C, Torrico F, Solano M, Torrico MC, Rodriguez P, et al. Maternal Trypanosoma cruzi infection upregulates capacity of uninfected neonate cells To produce pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines. Infection and immunity. 2000;68(9):5430–4. Epub 2000/08/19. pmid:10948177; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC101811.
  9. 9. Brabin BJ, Romagosa C, Abdelgalil S, Menendez C, Verhoeff FH, McGready R, et al. The sick placenta-the role of malaria. Placenta. 2004;25(5):359–78. Epub 2004/04/15. S0143400403003072 [pii]. pmid:15081631.
  10. 10. Desai M, ter Kuile FO, Nosten F, McGready R, Asamoa K, Brabin B, et al. Epidemiology and burden of malaria in pregnancy. The Lancet infectious diseases. 2007;7(2):93–104. Epub 2007/01/26. S1473-3099(07)70021-X [pii] pmid:17251080.
  11. 11. Kalanda BF, van Buuren S, Verhoeff FH, Brabin BJ. Catch-up growth in Malawian babies, a longitudinal study of normal and low birthweight babies born in a malarious endemic area. Early human development. 2005;81(10):841–50. Epub 2005/08/20. pmid:16109465.
  12. 12. Walther B, Miles DJ, Crozier S, Waight P, Palmero MS, Ojuola O, et al. Placental malaria is associated with reduced early life weight development of affected children independent of low birth weight. Malar J. 2010;9:16. Epub 2010/01/16. pmid:20074331; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2841609.
  13. 13. Le Hesran JY, Cot M, Personne P, Fievet N, Dubois B, Beyeme M, et al. Maternal placental infection with Plasmodium falciparum and malaria morbidity during the first 2 years of life. Am J Epidemiol. 1997;146(10):826–31. Epub 1997/12/31. pmid:9384203.
  14. 14. Mutabingwa TK, Bolla MC, Li JL, Domingo GJ, Li X, Fried M, et al. Maternal malaria and gravidity interact to modify infant susceptibility to malaria. PLoS Med. 2005;2(12):e407. Epub 2005/11/02. 05-PLME-RA-0127R3 [pii] pmid:16259531; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1277932.
  15. 15. Rachas A, Le Port A, Cottrell G, Guerra J, Choudat I, Bouscaillou J, et al. Placental Malaria is Associated With Increased Risk of Nonmalaria Infection During the First 18 Months of Life in a Beninese Population. Clin Infect Dis. 2012. Epub 2012/05/23. cis490 [pii] pmid:22610927.
  16. 16. Adegnika AA, Kohler C, Agnandji ST, Chai SK, Labuda L, Breitling LP, et al. Pregnancy-associated malaria affects toll-like receptor ligand-induced cytokine responses in cord blood. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2008;198(6):928–36. Epub 2008/08/08. pmid:18684097.
  17. 17. Fievet N, Varani S, Ibitokou S, Briand V, Louis S, Perrin RX, et al. Plasmodium falciparum exposure in utero, maternal age and parity influence the innate activation of foetal antigen presenting cells. Malar J. 2009;8:251. Epub 2009/11/06. 1475-2875-8-251 [pii] pmid:19889240; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2780449.
  18. 18. Walther B, Miles DJ, Waight P, Palmero MS, Ojuola O, Touray ES, et al. Placental malaria is associated with attenuated CD4 T-cell responses to tuberculin PPD 12 months after BCG vaccination. BMC infectious diseases. 2012;12:6. Epub 2012/01/17. pmid:22243970; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3274427.
  19. 19. Broen K, Brustoski K, Engelmann I, Luty AJ. Placental Plasmodium falciparum infection: causes and consequences of in utero sensitization to parasite antigens. Mol Biochem Parasitol. 2007;151(1):1–8. Epub 2006/11/04. S0166-6851(06)00286-6 [pii] pmid:17081634.
  20. 20. Mackroth MS, Malhotra I, Mungai P, Koech D, Muchiri E, King CL. Human cord blood CD4+CD25hi regulatory T cells suppress prenatally acquired T cell responses to Plasmodium falciparum antigens. J Immunol. 2011;186(5):2780–91. Epub 2011/02/01. jimmunol.1001188 [pii] pmid:21278348.
  21. 21. Malhotra I, Mungai P, Muchiri E, Ouma J, Sharma S, Kazura JW, et al. Distinct Th1- and Th2-Type prenatal cytokine responses to Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte invasion ligands. Infection and immunity. 2005;73(6):3462–70. Epub 2005/05/24. pmid:15908375; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1111871.
  22. 22. Flanagan KL, Halliday A, Burl S, Landgraf K, Jagne YJ, Noho-Konteh F, et al. The effect of placental malaria infection on cord blood and maternal immunoregulatory responses at birth. European journal of immunology. 2010;40(4):1062–72. Epub 2009/12/30. pmid:20039298.
  23. 23. Reichert T, DeBruyere M, Deneys V, Totterman T, Lydyard P, Yuksel F, et al. Lymphocyte subset reference ranges in adult Caucasians. Clin Immunol Immunopathol. 1991;60(2):190–208. Epub 1991/08/01. pmid:1712687.
  24. 24. Sundstrom Y, Nilsson C, Lilja G, Karre K, Troye-Blomberg M, Berg L. The expression of human natural killer cell receptors in early life. Scandinavian journal of immunology. 2007;66(2–3):335–44. Epub 2007/07/20. SJI1980 [pii] pmid:17635811.
  25. 25. Saule P, Trauet J, Dutriez V, Lekeux V, Dessaint JP, Labalette M. Accumulation of memory T cells from childhood to old age: central and effector memory cells in CD4(+) versus effector memory and terminally differentiated memory cells in CD8(+) compartment. Mechanisms of ageing and development. 2006;127(3):274–81. Epub 2005/12/15. S0047-6374(05)00275-7 [pii] pmid:16352331.
  26. 26. Minigo G, Woodberry T, Piera KA, Salwati E, Tjitra E, Kenangalem E, et al. Parasite-dependent expansion of TNF receptor II-positive regulatory T cells with enhanced suppressive activity in adults with severe malaria. PLoS pathogens. 2009;5(4):e1000402. Epub 2009/04/25. pmid:19390618; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2668192.
  27. 27. Walther M, Jeffries D, Finney OC, Njie M, Ebonyi A, Deininger S, et al. Distinct roles for FOXP3 and FOXP3 CD4 T cells in regulating cellular immunity to uncomplicated and severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria. PLoS pathogens. 2009;5(4):e1000364. Epub 2009/04/04. pmid:19343213; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2658808.
  28. 28. Walther M, Tongren JE, Andrews L, Korbel D, King E, Fletcher H, et al. Upregulation of TGF-beta, FOXP3, and CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells correlates with more rapid parasite growth in human malaria infection. Immunity. 2005;23(3):287–96. Epub 2005/09/20. S1074-7613(05)00245-1 [pii] pmid:16169501.
  29. 29. Clemente A, Caporale R, Sannella AR, Majori G, Severini C, Fadigati G, et al. Plasmodium falciparum soluble extracts potentiate the suppressive function of polyclonal T regulatory cells through activation of TGFbeta-mediated signals. Cell Microbiol. 2011;13(9):1328–38. Epub 2011/06/28. pmid:21699642.
  30. 30. Mold JE, Michaelsson J, Burt TD, Muench MO, Beckerman KP, Busch MP, et al. Maternal alloantigens promote the development of tolerogenic fetal regulatory T cells in utero. Science. 2008;322(5907):1562–5. Epub 2008/12/06. pmid:19056990; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2648820.
  31. 31. Moore KW, de Waal Malefyt R, Coffman RL, O'Garra A. Interleukin-10 and the interleukin-10 receptor. Annu Rev Immunol. 2001;19:683–765. Epub 2001/03/13. 19/1/683 [pii] pmid:11244051.
  32. 32. Levings MK, Sangregorio R, Galbiati F, Squadrone S, de Waal Malefyt R, Roncarolo MG. IFN-alpha and IL-10 induce the differentiation of human type 1 T regulatory cells. J Immunol. 2001;166(9):5530–9. Epub 2001/04/21. pmid:11313392.
  33. 33. Ralainirina N, Poli A, Michel T, Poos L, Andres E, Hentges F, et al. Control of NK cell functions by CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells. Journal of leukocyte biology. 2007;81(1):144–53. Epub 2006/09/09. pmid:16959895.
  34. 34. Farag SS, Caligiuri MA. Human natural killer cell development and biology. Blood Rev. 2006;20(3):123–37. Epub 2005/12/21. S0268-960X(05)00055-X [pii] pmid:16364519.
  35. 35. Dalle JH, Menezes J, Wagner E, Blagdon M, Champagne J, Champagne MA, et al. Characterization of cord blood natural killer cells: implications for transplantation and neonatal infections. Pediatr Res. 2005;57(5 Pt 1):649–55. Epub 2005/02/19. 01.PDR.0000156501.55431.20 [pii] pmid:15718362.
  36. 36. Horowitz A, Newman KC, Evans JH, Korbel DS, Davis DM, Riley EM. Cross-talk between T cells and NK cells generates rapid effector responses to Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes. J Immunol. 2010;184(11):6043–52. Epub 2010/04/30. pmid:20427769.
  37. 37. Newman KC, Korbel DS, Hafalla JC, Riley EM. Cross-talk with myeloid accessory cells regulates human natural killer cell interferon-gamma responses to malaria. PLoS pathogens. 2006;2(12):e118. Epub 2006/12/13. pmid:17154717; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1687207.
  38. 38. Othoro C, Moore JM, Wannemuehler KA, Moses S, Lal A, Otieno J, et al. Elevated gamma interferon-producing NK cells, CD45RO memory-like T cells, and CD4 T cells are associated with protection against malaria infection in pregnancy. Infection and immunity. 2008;76(4):1678–85. Epub 2008/02/06. pmid:18250175; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2292852.
  39. 39. Azuma T, Takahashi T, Kunisato A, Kitamura T, Hirai H. Human CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells suppress NKT cell functions. Cancer research. 2003;63(15):4516–20. Epub 2003/08/09. pmid:12907625.
  40. 40. Watanabe H, Weerasinghe A, Miyaji C, Sekikawa H, Toyabe S, Mannor MK, et al. Expansion of unconventional T cells with natural killer markers in malaria patients. Parasitology international. 2003;52(1):61–70. Epub 2003/01/25. pmid:12543148.
  41. 41. Pied S, Roland J, Louise A, Voegtle D, Soulard V, Mazier D, et al. Liver CD4-CD8- NK1.1+ TCR alpha beta intermediate cells increase during experimental malaria infection and are able to exhibit inhibitory activity against the parasite liver stage in vitro. J Immunol. 2000;164(3):1463–9. Epub 2000/01/21. pmid:10640763.
  42. 42. van Der Vliet HJ, Nishi N, de Gruijl TD, von Blomberg BM, van den Eertwegh AJ, Pinedo HM, et al. Human natural killer T cells acquire a memory-activated phenotype before birth. Blood. 2000;95(7):2440–2. Epub 2000/03/25. pmid:10733519.
  43. 43. Harner S, Noessner E, Nadas K, Leumann-Runge A, Schiemann M, Faber FL, et al. Cord blood Valpha24-Vbeta11 natural killer T cells display a Th2-chemokine receptor profile and cytokine responses. PloS one. 2011;6(1):e15714. Epub 2011/02/10. pmid:21305060; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3031538.
  44. 44. Huynh BT, Fievet N, Gbaguidi G, Borgella S, Mevo BG, Massougbodji A, et al. Malaria associated symptoms in pregnant women followed-up in Benin. Malar J. 2011;10:72. Epub 2011/04/02. 1475-2875-10-72 [pii] pmid:21453493; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3076273.
  45. 45. Le Port A, Watier L, Cottrell G, Ouedraogo S, Dechavanne C, Pierrat C, et al. Infections in infants during the first 12 months of life: role of placental malaria and environmental factors. PloS one. 2011;6(11):e27516. Epub 2011/11/19. PONE-D-11-02896 [pii]. pmid:22096588; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3214070.
  46. 46. Borgella S, Fievet N, Huynh BT, Ibitokou S, Hounguevou G, Affedjou J, et al. Impact of pregnancy-associated malaria on infant malaria infection in southern Benin. PloS one. 2013;8(11):e80624. Epub 2013/11/16. pmid:24236190; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3827421.
  47. 47. Hori S, Takahashi T, Sakaguchi S. Control of autoimmunity by naturally arising regulatory CD4+ T cells. Advances in immunology. 2003;81:331–71. Epub 2004/01/09. pmid:14711059.
  48. 48. Comans-Bitter WM, de Groot R, van den Beemd R, Neijens HJ, Hop WC, Groeneveld K, et al. Immunophenotyping of blood lymphocytes in childhood. Reference values for lymphocyte subpopulations. The Journal of pediatrics. 1997;130(3):388–93. Epub 1997/03/01. S0022-3476(97)70200-2 [pii]. pmid:9063413.
  49. 49. Shahabuddin S, Al-Ayed I, Gad El-Rab MO, Qureshi MI. Age-related changes in blood lymphocyte subsets of Saudi Arabian healthy children. Clinical and diagnostic laboratory immunology. 1998;5(5):632–5. Epub 1998/09/08. pmid:9729529; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC95633.
  50. 50. Gupta S, Gollapudi S. Molecular mechanisms of TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis in aging human T cell subsets. Int J Biochem Cell Biol. 2005;37(5):1034–42. Epub 2005/03/04. S1357-2725(04)00340-1 [pii] pmid:15743676.
  51. 51. Aggarwal S, Gollapudi S, Yel L, Gupta AS, Gupta S. TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis in neonatal lymphocytes: TNFRp55 expression and downstream pathways of apoptosis. Genes and immunity. 2000;1(4):271–9. Epub 2001/02/24. pmid:11196704.
  52. 52. Grindebacke H, Stenstad H, Quiding-Jarbrink M, Waldenstrom J, Adlerberth I, Wold AE, et al. Dynamic development of homing receptor expression and memory cell differentiation of infant CD4+CD25high regulatory T cells. J Immunol. 2009;183(7):4360–70. Epub 2009/09/08. jimmunol.0901091 [pii] pmid:19734224.
  53. 53. Fry TJ, Mackall CL. The many faces of IL-7: from lymphopoiesis to peripheral T cell maintenance. J Immunol. 2005;174(11):6571–6. Epub 2005/05/21. pmid:15905493.
  54. 54. Schonland SO, Zimmer JK, Lopez-Benitez CM, Widmann T, Ramin KD, Goronzy JJ, et al. Homeostatic control of T-cell generation in neonates. Blood. 2003;102(4):1428–34. Epub 2003/04/26. pmid:12714521.
  55. 55. Smith NL, Wissink E, Wang J, Pinello JF, Davenport MP, Grimson A, et al. Rapid proliferation and differentiation impairs the development of memory CD8+ T cells in early life. J Immunol. 2014;193(1):177–84. Epub 2014/05/23. pmid:24850719; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4065808.
  56. 56. Fuchizawa T, Adachi Y, Ito Y, Higashiyama H, Kanegane H, Futatani T, et al. Developmental changes of FOXP3-expressing CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells and their impairment in patients with FOXP3 gene mutations. Clin Immunol. 2007;125(3):237–46. Epub 2007/10/06. pmid:17916446.
  57. 57. Fujimaki W, Takahashi N, Ohnuma K, Nagatsu M, Kurosawa H, Yoshida S, et al. Comparative study of regulatory T cell function of human CD25CD4 T cells from thymocytes, cord blood, and adult peripheral blood. Clinical & developmental immunology. 2008;2008:305859. Epub 2008/09/26. pmid:18815628; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2547481.
  58. 58. Tang J, Li BQ, Ruan J, Zhang LJ. [Expression of Foxp3 in CD4+CD25high Treg cells of neonatal cord blood]. Xi Bao Yu Fen Zi Mian Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2008;24(4):365–7. Epub 2008/04/09. pmid:18394345.
  59. 59. Hrdy J, Kocourkova I, Prokesova L. Impaired function of regulatory T cells in cord blood of children of allergic mothers. Clinical and experimental immunology. 2012;170(1):10–7. Epub 2012/09/05. pmid:22943196; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3444712.
  60. 60. D'Andrea A, Goux D, De Lalla C, Koezuka Y, Montagna D, Moretta A, et al. Neonatal invariant Valpha24+ NKT lymphocytes are activated memory cells. European journal of immunology. 2000;30(6):1544–50. Epub 2000/07/18. pmid:10898489.
  61. 61. Horowitz A, Riley EM. Activation of human NK cells by malaria-infected red blood cells. Methods Mol Biol. 2010;612:429–46. Epub 2009/12/25. pmid:20033658.
  62. 62. Bisseye C, Yindom LM, Simpore J, Morgan WD, Holder AA, Ismaili J. An engineered Plasmodium falciparum C-terminal 19-kilodalton merozoite surface protein 1 vaccine candidate induces high levels of interferon-gamma production associated with cellular immune responses to specific peptide sequences in Gambian adults naturally exposed to malaria. Clinical and experimental immunology. 2011;166(3):366–73. Epub 2011/11/09. pmid:22059995; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3232385.
  63. 63. Soulard V, Amadoudji Zin M, Fitting C, Ibitokou S, Oesterholt M, Luty AJ, et al. Placental malaria-associated suppression of parasite-specific immune response in neonates has no major impact on systemic CD4 T cell homeostasis. Infection and immunity. 2011;79(7):2801–9. Epub 2011/04/27. IAI.00203-11 [pii] pmid:21518782; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3191961.
  64. 64. Bisseye C, van der Sande M, Morgan WD, Holder AA, Pinder M, Ismaili J. Plasmodium falciparum infection of the placenta impacts on the T helper type 1 (Th1)/Th2 balance of neonatal T cells through CD4(+)CD25(+) forkhead box P3(+) regulatory T cells and interleukin-10. Clinical and experimental immunology. 2009;158(3):287–93. Epub 2009/09/18. CEI4014 [pii] pmid:19758375; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2792824.
  65. 65. Brustoski K, Moller U, Kramer M, Hartgers FC, Kremsner PG, Krzych U, et al. Reduced cord blood immune effector-cell responsiveness mediated by CD4+ cells induced in utero as a consequence of placental Plasmodium falciparum infection. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2006;193(1):146–54. Epub 2005/12/03. JID35185 [pii] pmid:16323143.
  66. 66. Mold JE, McCune JM. Immunological tolerance during fetal development: from mouse to man. Advances in immunology. 2012;115:73–111. Epub 2012/05/23. pmid:22608256.
  67. 67. Brustoski K, Moller U, Kramer M, Petelski A, Brenner S, Palmer DR, et al. IFN-gamma and IL-10 mediate parasite-specific immune responses of cord blood cells induced by pregnancy-associated Plasmodium falciparum malaria. J Immunol. 2005;174(3):1738–45. Epub 2005/01/22. 174/3/1738 [pii]. pmid:15661939.
  68. 68. Finney OC, Riley EM, Walther M. Phenotypic analysis of human peripheral blood regulatory T cells (CD4+FOXP3+CD127lo/-) ex vivo and after in vitro restimulation with malaria antigens. European journal of immunology. 2010;40(1):47–60. Epub 2009/10/31. pmid:19877016.
  69. 69. Ghiringhelli F, Menard C, Terme M, Flament C, Taieb J, Chaput N, et al. CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells inhibit natural killer cell functions in a transforming growth factor-beta-dependent manner. The Journal of experimental medicine. 2005;202(8):1075–85. Epub 2005/10/19. pmid:16230475; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2213209.
  70. 70. Romagnani C, Della Chiesa M, Kohler S, Moewes B, Radbruch A, Moretta L, et al. Activation of human NK cells by plasmacytoid dendritic cells and its modulation by CD4+ T helper cells and CD4+ CD25hi T regulatory cells. European journal of immunology. 2005;35(8):2452–8. Epub 2005/07/06. pmid:15997468.
  71. 71. Brickley EB, Wood AM, Kabyemela E, Morrison R, Kurtis JD, Fried M, et al. Fetal origins of malarial disease: cord blood cytokines as risk markers for pediatric severe malarial anemia. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2015;211(3):436–44. Epub 2014/08/21. pmid:25139023; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4296172.
  72. 72. Kabyemela E, Goncalves BP, Prevots DR, Morrison R, Harrington W, Gwamaka M, et al. Cytokine profiles at birth predict malaria severity during infancy. PloS one. 2013;8(10):e77214. Epub 2013/10/17. pmid:24130857; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3795067.
  73. 73. Gbedande K, Varani S, Ibitokou S, Houngbegnon P, Borgella S, Nouatin O, et al. Malaria modifies neonatal and early-life toll-like receptor cytokine responses. Infection and immunity. 2013;81(8):2686–96. Epub 2013/05/22. IAI.00237-13 [pii] pmid:23690399; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3719572.
  74. 74. Chelimo K, Embury PB, Sumba PO, Vulule J, Ofulla AV, Long C, et al. Age-related differences in naturally acquired T cell memory to Plasmodium falciparum merozoite surface protein 1. PloS one. 2011;6(9):e24852. Epub 2011/09/22. PONE-D-11-07864 [pii]. pmid:21935482; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3174209.
  75. 75. Ateba Ngoa U, Zinsou JF, Kassa RF, Ngoune Feugap E, Honkpehedji YJ, Massinga-Loembe M, et al. Assessment of the effect of Schistosoma haematobium co infection on malaria parasites and immune responses in rural populations in Gabon: study protocol. SpringerPlus. 2014;3:388. Epub 2014/08/15. pmid:25120947; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4128953.
  76. 76. Hartgers FC, Obeng BB, Kruize YC, Dijkhuis A, McCall M, Sauerwein RW, et al. Responses to malarial antigens are altered in helminth-infected children. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2009;199(10):1528–35. Epub 2009/04/28. pmid:19392626.
  77. 77. Wammes LJ, Hamid F, Wiria AE, de Gier B, Sartono E, Maizels RM, et al. Regulatory T cells in human geohelminth infection suppress immune responses to BCG and Plasmodium falciparum. European journal of immunology. 2010;40(2):437–42. Epub 2010/01/12. pmid:20063313.
  78. 78. Ateba-Ngoa U, Mombo-Ngoma G, Zettlmeissl E, van der Vlugt LE, de Jong S, Matsiegui PB, et al. CD4+CD25hiFOXP3+ cells in cord blood of neonates born from filaria infected mother are negatively associated with CD4+Tbet+ and CD4+RORgammat+ T cells. PloS one. 2014;9(12):e114630. Epub 2014/12/23. pmid:25531674; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4273973.
  79. 79. Menzies SK, Rodriguez A, Chico M, Sandoval C, Broncano N, Guadalupe I, et al. Risk factors for soil-transmitted helminth infections during the first 3 years of life in the tropics; findings from a birth cohort. PLoS neglected tropical diseases. 2014;8(2):e2718. Epub 2014/03/04. pmid:24587469; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3937274.