Plasmodium falciparum egress disrupts endothelial junctions and activates JAK-STAT signaling in a microvascular 3D blood-brain barrier model.

恶性疟原虫逸出破坏内皮细胞连接,并在微血管 3D 血脑屏障模型中激活 JAK-STAT 信号通路

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作者:Piatti Livia, Batzilla Alina, Nakaki Fumio, Fleckenstein Hannah, Korbmacher François, Long Rory K M, Schraivogel Daniel, Hawkins John A, Romero-Uruñuela Tais, López-Gutiérrez Borja, Sanz Sender Silvia, Schwab Yannick, Steinmetz Lars M, Sharpe James, Bernabeu Maria
Cerebral malaria is a severe neurovascular complication of Plasmodium falciparum infection, with high mortality rates even after treatment with effective antimalarials. Limitations in current experimental models have hindered our knowledge of the disease. We developed a 3D blood-brain barrier (BBB) model with enhanced barrier properties using primary brain endothelial cells, astrocytes, and pericytes. Exposure to parasite egress products increases microvascular permeability, likely due to transcriptional downregulation of junctional and vascular development genes in endothelial cells. In addition, it increases the expression of ferroptosis markers, antigen presentation and type I interferon genes and upregulates the JAK-STAT pathway across all BBB cell types. Incubation with cytoadherent schizont-stage P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes induces a similar, but highly localized transcriptional shift, along with inter-endothelial gaps at sites of parasite egress, leading to enhanced permeability. Treatment with the JAK-STAT inhibitor Ruxolitinib prevents the increase in permeability induced by P. falciparum egress products. These findings provide key insights into the parasite-mediated mechanisms driving brain microvascular pathogenesis in cerebral malaria and suggest potential avenues for adjunctive therapies.

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