TY - JOUR
T1 - Mercury exposure and murine response to Plasmodium yoelii infection and immunization
AU - Silbergeld, E. K.
AU - Sacci, Jr
AU - Azad, A. F.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by grants from the Heinz Family Foundation, the W. Alton Jones Foundation, and the Pan American Health Organization. The authors would like to thank Dr. Stephen Hoffman for the kind gift of Plasmodium yoelii infected mosquitoes. Sarah Woodruff, Circey Trevant, Girvan Liggans, Peter Crompton, and Xiu Li all contributed as student interns to the studies described. The continued advice of Drs. Jose Maria da Souza, Clive Shiff, and G. Thomas Strickland is gratefully acknowledged.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Malaria has re-emerged in Amazonia over the past two decades. Many factors have been proposed for this, among them changes in population distribution, failures of vector control and pharmacologic management, and local as well as global environmental changes. Among the latter factors, we have studied the potential role of increasing exposures to the immunotoxic metal mercury, which is widely used in Amazonia for artisanal extraction of alluvial gold deposits. We report here that Hg impairs host resistance to malaria infection at exo-erythrocytic stages. Hg exposed mice have higher parasitemia following infection with sporozoites, but not after transfusion of infected red cells. In mice inoculated with irradiated sporozoites, Hg blocks acquisition of immunity. In addition Hg affects immunologic parameters that are known to be involved in host response to malaria infection. These results have potential implications for the incidence and prevalence of malaria among populations exposed to mercury from artisanal goldmining and consumption of contaminated fish regions with high rates of malaria and other infectious diseases.
AB - Malaria has re-emerged in Amazonia over the past two decades. Many factors have been proposed for this, among them changes in population distribution, failures of vector control and pharmacologic management, and local as well as global environmental changes. Among the latter factors, we have studied the potential role of increasing exposures to the immunotoxic metal mercury, which is widely used in Amazonia for artisanal extraction of alluvial gold deposits. We report here that Hg impairs host resistance to malaria infection at exo-erythrocytic stages. Hg exposed mice have higher parasitemia following infection with sporozoites, but not after transfusion of infected red cells. In mice inoculated with irradiated sporozoites, Hg blocks acquisition of immunity. In addition Hg affects immunologic parameters that are known to be involved in host response to malaria infection. These results have potential implications for the incidence and prevalence of malaria among populations exposed to mercury from artisanal goldmining and consumption of contaminated fish regions with high rates of malaria and other infectious diseases.
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U2 - 10.3109/08923970009016432
DO - 10.3109/08923970009016432
M3 - Article
C2 - 11105781
AN - SCOPUS:0033724675
SN - 0892-3973
VL - 22
SP - 685
EP - 695
JO - Immunopharmacology and Immunotoxicology
JF - Immunopharmacology and Immunotoxicology
IS - 4
ER -