Does malaria suffer from lack of memory?
- 10 September 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Immunological Reviews
- Vol. 201 (1) , 268-290
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0105-2896.2004.00181.x
Abstract
Summary: It is widely perceived that immunity to malaria is, to an extent, defective and that one component of this defective immune response is the inability to induce or maintain long‐term memory responses. If true, this is likely to pose problems for development of an effective vaccine against malaria. In this article, we critically review and challenge this interpretation of the epidemiological and experimental evidence. While evasion and modulation of host immune responses clearly occurs and naturally acquired immunity is far from optimal, mechanisms to control blood‐stage parasites are acquired and maintained by individuals living in endemic areas, allowing parasite density to be kept below the threshold for induction of acute disease. Furthermore, protective immunity to severe pathology is achieved relatively rapidly and is maintained in the absence of boosting by re‐infection. Nevertheless, there are significant challenges to overcome. The need for multiple infections to acquire immunity means that young children remain at risk of infection for far too long. Persistent or frequent exposure to antigen seems to be required to maintain anti‐parasite immunity (premunition). Lastly, pre‐erythrocytic and sexual stages of the life cycle are poorly immunogenic, and there is little evidence of effective pre‐erythrocytic or transmission‐blocking immunity at the population level. While these problems might theoretically be due to defective immunological memory, we suggest alternative explanations. Moreover, we question the extent to which these problems are malaria‐specific rather than generic (i.e. result from inherent limitations of the vertebrate immune system).Keywords
This publication has 167 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is Immunity to malaria really short-lived?Published by Elsevier ,2003
- Immune Regulation by helminth parasites: cellular and molecular mechanismsNature Reviews Immunology, 2003
- Diversity of Plasmodium falciparum populations and complexity of infections in relation to transmission intensity and host age: a study from the Usambara Mountains, TanzaniaPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,2001
- The epidemiology of febrile malaria episodes in an area of unstable and seasonal transmissionTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2000
- Is T-cell priming required for initiation of pathology in malaria infections?Immunology Today, 1999
- Host Age as a determinant of naturally acquired immunity to Plasmodium falciparumParasitology Today, 1995
- Quantification of t cells reactive to pf155/RESA peptides in plasmodium falciparum-exposed individualsResearch in Immunology, 1994
- Attributable fraction estimates and case definitions for malaria in endemicStatistics in Medicine, 1994
- Parasitic Disease as a Cause of ImmunosuppressionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Some points in the epidemiology of malaria arising out of the study of the malaria epidemic in Ceylon in 1934–1935Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1936