Autores
Jürgen Krücken, Mohamed A Dkhil, Juliane V Braun, Regina MU Schroetel, Manal El-Khadragy, Peter Carmeliet, Horst Mossmann, Frank Wunderlich
Fecha de publicación
2005/1/1
Revista
Infection and immunity
Volumen
73
Número
1
Páginas
436-443
Editor
American Society for Microbiology
Descripción
Testosterone induces a lethal outcome in otherwise self-healing blood-stage malaria caused by Plasmodium chabaudi. Here, we examine possible testosterone effects on the antimalaria effectors spleen and liver in female C57BL/6 mice. Self-healing malaria activates gating mechanisms in the spleen and liver that lead to a dramatic reduction in trapping activity, as measured by quantifying the uptake of 3-μm-diameter fluorescent polystyrol particles. However, testosterone delays malaria-induced closing of the liver, but not the spleen. Coincidently, testosterone causes an ∼3- to 28-fold depression of the mRNA levels of nine malaria-responsive genes, out of 299 genes tested, only in the liver and not in the spleen, as shown by cDNA arrays and Northern blotting. Among these are the genes encoding plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI1) and hydroxysteroid sulfotransferase (STA2). STA2, which detoxifies bile acids …
Citas totales
Artículos de Google Académico
J Krücken, MA Dkhil, JV Braun, RMU Schroetel… - Infection and immunity, 2005