Schistosoma mansoni infection induces plasmablast and plasma cell death in the bone marrow and accelerates the decline of host vaccine responses

Author:

Musaigwa FungaiORCID,Kamdem Severin DonaldORCID,Mpotje ThaboORCID,Mosala Paballo,Abdel Aziz Nada,Herbert De’Broski R.ORCID,Brombacher Frank,Nono Justin KomguepORCID

Abstract

Schistosomiasis is a potentially lethal parasitic disease that profoundly impacts systemic immune function in chronically infected hosts through mechanisms that remain unknown. Given the immunoregulatory dysregulation experienced in infected individuals, this study examined the impact of chronic schistosomiasis on the sustainability of vaccine-induced immunity in both children living in endemic areas and experimental infections in mice. Data show that chronicSchistosoma mansoniinfection impaired the persistence of vaccine specific antibody responses in poliovirus-vaccinated humans and mice. Mechanistically, schistosomiasis primarily fostered plasmablast and plasma cell death in the bone marrow and removal of parasites following praziquantel treatment reversed the observed cell death and partially restored vaccine-induced memory responses associated with increased serum anti-polio antibody responses. Our findings strongly suggest a previously unrecognized mechanism to explain how chronic schistosomiasis interferes with an otherwise effective vaccine regimen and further advocates for therapeutic intervention strategies that reduce schistosomiasis burden in endemic areas prior to vaccination.

Funder

European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership

Government of the United Kingdom

Poliomyelitis Research Foundation

National Research Foundation

University of Cape Town

International Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

South African Medical Research Council

CIDRI-AFRICA

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Virology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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