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Babesia microtiPrimarily Invades Mature Erythrocytes in Mice

Authors :
Borggraefe, Ingo
Yuan, Jie
Telford, Sam R.
Menon, Sanjay
Hunter, Rouette
Shah, Sohela
Spielman, Andrew
Gelfand, Jeffrey A.
Wortis, Henry H.
Vannier, Edouard
Source :
Infection and Immunity; June 2006, Vol. 74 Issue: 6 p3204-3212, 9p
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

ABSTRACTBabesia microtiis a tick-borne red blood cell parasite that causes babesiosis in people. Its most common vertebrate reservoir is the white-footed mouse. To determine whether B. microtiinvades reticulocytes, as does the canine pathogen B. gibsoni, we infected the susceptible inbred mouse strains C.B-17.scid and DBA/2 with a clinical isolate of B. microti. Staining of fixed permeabilized red blood cells with 4′,6′-diamidino-2-phenylindole or YOYO-1, a sensitive nucleic acid stain, revealed parasite nuclei as large bright dots. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that parasite DNA is primarily found in mature erythrocytes that expressed Babesiaantigens but not the transferrin receptor CD71. In contrast, CD71-positive reticulocytes rarely contained Babesianuclei and failed to express Babesiaantigens. Accordingly, the frequency of YOYO-1-positive, CD71-negative cells strongly correlated with parasitemia, defined as the frequency of infected red blood cells assessed on Giemsa-stained blood smears. Importantly, the absolute numbers generated by the two techniques were similar. Parasitemia was modest and transient in DBA/2 mice but intense and sustained in C.B-17.scid mice. In both strains, parasitemia preceded reticulocytosis, but reticulocytes remained refractory to B. microti. In immunocompetent C.B-17 mice, reticulocytosis developed early, despite a marginal and short-lived parasitemia. Likewise, an early reticulocytosis developed in resistant BALB/cBy and B10.D2 mice. These studies establish that B. microtihas a tropism for mature erythrocytes. Although reticulocytes are rarely infected, the delayed reticulocytosis in susceptible strains may result from parasite or host activities to limit renewal of the mature erythrocyte pool, thereby preventing an overwhelming parasitemia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00199567 and 10985522
Volume :
74
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Infection and Immunity
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs57558454
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/IAI.01560-05