» Articles » PMID: 38968336

Early Symptom-associated Inflammatory Responses Shift to Type 2 Responses in Controlled Human Schistosome Infection

Abstract

Schistosomiasis is an infection caused by contact with -contaminated water and affects more than 230 million people worldwide with varying morbidity. The roles of T helper 2 (T2) cells and regulatory immune responses in chronic infection are well documented, but less is known about human immune responses during acute infection. Here, we comprehensively map immune responses during controlled human infection using male or female cercariae. Immune responses to male or female parasite single-sex infection were comparable. An early T1-biased inflammatory response was observed at week 4 after infection, which was particularly apparent in individuals experiencing symptoms of acute schistosomiasis. By week 8 after infection, inflammatory responses were followed by an expansion of T2 and regulatory cell subsets. This study demonstrates the shift from T1 to both T2 and regulatory responses, typical of chronic schistosomiasis, in the absence of egg production and provides immunological insight into the clinical manifestations of acute schistosomiasis.

Citing Articles

Clinical tolerance but no protective efficacy in a placebo-controlled trial of repeated controlled schistosome infection.

Koopman J, Houlder E, Janse J, Lamers O, Roozen G, Sijtsma J J Clin Invest. 2024; 135(4).

PMID: 39666392 PMC: 11827845. DOI: 10.1172/JCI185422.


Co-expression gene module analysis in response to attenuated cercaria vaccine reveals a critical role for NK cells in protection against Schistosoma mansoni.

Neto A, Vitoriano-Souza J, Khouri M, Favaro R, Wilson R, Leite L Parasit Vectors. 2024; 17(1):476.

PMID: 39563428 PMC: 11575109. DOI: 10.1186/s13071-024-06505-0.