Publications

Regulation of Naturally Acquired Mucosal Immunity to Streptococcus pneumoniae in Healthy Malawian Adults and Children

Authors:

Sarah J. Glennie, Dominic Banda, Wakisa Mulwafu, Rose Nkhata, Neil A. Williams, Robert S. Heyderman

Abstract:

Worldwide, invasive pneumococcal disease caused byStreptococcus pneumoniae is most common in young children. In adults, disease rates decline following intermittent colonization and the acquisition of naturally acquired immunity. We characterized mucosal and systemic pneumococcal-specific T-cell responses in African children and adults who contend with intense rates of colonization, up to 100% and 60% respectively. We find most Malawian children have high pneumococcal-specific T-cell responses in tonsil tissue and peripheral blood. In addition, frequent commensalism generates CD25hi (Tregs) which modulate mucosal pneumococcal-specific T-cell responses in some children and ≥50% of adults. We propose that immune regulation may prolong pneumococcal colonization and predispose vulnerable individuals to disease.

Journal:

PLoS One

Year:

2012

PMID:

23284694

PMCID:

PMC3524234

Hyperlink:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3524234/