Litcius/Paper detail

Immune Response and Microbiota Profiles during Coinfection with Plasmodium vivax and Soil-Transmitted Helminths

Alice V. Easton, Mayra Raciny-Aleman, Victor Liu, Erica Ruan, Christian Marier, Adriana Heguy, María Fernanda Yasnot, Ana Rodrı́guez, P’ng Loke

2020mBio33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plasmodium (malaria) and helminth parasite coinfections are frequent, and both infections can be affected by the host gut microbiota. However, the relationship between coinfection and the gut microbiota is unclear. By performing comprehensive analyses on blood/stool samples from 130 individuals in Colombia, we found that the gut microbiota may have a stronger relationship with the number of P. vivax (malaria) parasites than with the number of helminth parasites infecting a host. Microbiota analysis identified more predictors of the P. vivax parasite burden, whereas analysis of blood samples identified predictors of the helminth parasite burden. These results were unexpected, because we expected each parasite to be associated with greater differences in its biological niche (blood for P. vivax and the intestine for helminths). Instead, we find that bacterial taxa were the strongest predictors of P. vivax parasitemia levels, while circulating TGF-β levels were the strongest predictor of helminth parasite burdens.

Topics & Concepts

CoinfectionImmune systemImmunologyBiologyHelminthsPlasmodium vivaxVirologyMicrobiologyMalariaHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Plasmodium falciparumGut microbiota and healthParasitic Infections and DiagnosticsClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research
Immune Response and Microbiota Profiles during Coinfection with Plasmodium vivax and Soil-Transmitted Helminths | Litcius