Cytokine signatures of Plasmodium vivax infection during pregnancy and delivery outcomes (Raw Data)

DOI

Plasmodium vivax malaria is a neglected disease, particularly during pregnancy. Severe vivax malaria is associated with inflammatory responses but in pregnancy immune alterations make it uncertain as to what cytokine signatures predominate, and how the type and quantity of blood immune mediators influence delivery outcomes. We measured the plasma concentrations of a set of thirty-one biomarkers, comprising cytokines, chemokines and growth factors, in 987 plasma samples from a cohort of 572 pregnant women from five malaria-endemic tropical countries and related these concentrations to delivery outcomes (birth weight and hemoglobin levels) and malaria infection. Samples were collected at recruitment (first antenatal visit) and delivery (periphery, cord and placenta), allowing a longitudinal analysis. At recruitment, we found that P. vivax–infected pregnant women had higher plasma concentrations of proinflammatory (IL-6, IL-1β, CCL4, CCL2, CXCL10) and TH1-related cytokines (mainly IL-12) than uninfected women. This biomarker signature was essentially lost at delivery and was not associated with birth weight nor hemoglobin levels. Antiinflammatory cytokines (IL-10) were positively associated with infection and poor delivery outcomes. CCL11 was the only biomarker to show a negative association with P. vivax infection and its concentration at recruitment was positively associated with hemoglobin levels at delivery. Birth weight was negatively associated with peripheral IL-4 levels at delivery. Our multi-biomarker multicenter study is the first comprehensive one to characterize the immunological signature of P. vivax infection in pregnancy thus far. In conclusion, data show that while TH1 and pro-inflammatory responses are dominant during P. vivax infection in pregnancy, antiinflammatory cytokines may compensate excessive inflammation avoiding poor delivery outcomes, and skewness toward a TH2 response may trigger worse delivery outcomes. CCL11, a chemokine largely neglected in the field of malaria, emerges as an important marker of exposure or mediator in this condition.

Dades primàries associades a un article pendent de publicació a la revista Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34810/data86
Related Identifier IsCitedBy https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008155
Metadata Access https://dataverse.csuc.cat/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34810/data86
Provenance
Creator Adriana Malheiros; Aina Casellas ORCID logo; Anna Rosanas Urgell ORCID logo; Azucena Bardají ORCID logo; Camila Botto Menezes ORCID logo; Carlo Severini ORCID logo; Carlota Dobaño ORCID logo; Chetan E. Chitnis ORCID logo; Clara Menéndez ORCID logo; Dhiraj Hans; Flor E. Martínez Espinosa ORCID logo; Holger Werner Unger; Ivo Mueller ORCID logo; Maria Eugenia Castellanos ORCID logo; Maria Ome-Kaius; Meghna Desai ORCID logo; Michela Menegon; Myriam Arévalo Herrera ORCID logo; Norma Padilla ORCID logo; Pilar Requena ORCID logo; Sanjay K. Kochar; Stephen John Rogerson ORCID logo; Swati Kochar
Publisher CORA.Repositori de Dades de Recerca
Contributor UBIOESGD
Publication Year 2022
Rights CC BY-NC-SA 4.0; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
OpenAccess true
Contact UBIOESGD (Barcelona Institute for Global Health)
Representation
Resource Type Clinical data; Dataset
Format text/html; text/tab-separated-values; text/plain
Size 12836; 670969; 6869; 49674; 6870
Version 3.1
Discipline Life Sciences; Medicine