Entire Expressed Peripheral Blood Transcriptome in Pediatric Severe Malarial Anemia

Author:

Anyona Samuel1ORCID,Cheng Qiuying2,Guo Yan3,Raballah Evans4,Hurwitz Ivy2,Onyango Clinton5,Seidenberg Philip6,Schneider Kristan7,Lambert Christophe8ORCID,McMahon Benjamin9,Ouma Collins10ORCID,Perkins Douglas8

Affiliation:

1. Maseno University School of Medicine

2. Center for Global Health, University of New Mexico

3. University of Miami

4. School of Public Health, Biomedical Sciences and Technology, Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology

5. School of Public Health and Community Development, Maseno University

6. School of Medicine, University of New Mexico

7. University of Applied Sciences Mittweida

8. University of New Mexico

9. Los Alamos National Laboratory

10. Maseno University

Abstract

Abstract This study on severe malarial anemia (SMA: Hb < 6.0 g/dL), a leading global cause of childhood morbidity and mortality, analyzed the entire expressed transcriptome in whole blood from children with non-SMA (Hb ≥ 6.0 g/dL, n = 41) and SMA (n = 25). Analyses revealed 3,420 up-regulated and 3,442 down-regulated transcripts, signifying impairments in host inflammasome activation, cell death, innate immune responses, and cellular stress responses in SMA. Immune cell profiling showed a decreased antigenic and immune priming response in children with SMA, favoring polarization toward cellular proliferation and repair. Enrichment analysis further identified altered neutrophil and autophagy-related processes, consistent with neutrophil degranulation and altered ubiquitination and proteasome degradation. Pathway analyses highlighted SMA-related alterations in cellular homeostasis, signaling, response to environmental cues, and cellular and immune stress responses. Validation with a qRT-PCR array showed strong concordance with the sequencing data. These findings identify key molecular themes in SMA pathogenesis, providing potential targets for new malaria therapies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference82 articles.

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