Entire expressed peripheral blood transcriptome in pediatric severe malarial anemia
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Publication Date
2024-06-12Author
Samuel B Anyona, Qiuying Cheng, Sharley A Wasena, Shamim W Osata, Yan Guo, Evans Raballah, Ivy Hurwitz, Clinton O Onyango, Collins Ouma, Philip D Seidenberg, Benjamin H McMahon, Christophe G Lambert, Kristan A Schneider, Douglas J Perkins
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This study on severe malarial anemia (SMA: Hb < 6.0 g/dL), a leading global
cause of childhood morbidity and mortality, compares the entire expressed
whole blood host transcriptome between Kenyan children (3-48 mos.) with
non-SMA (Hb ≥ 6.0 g/dL, n = 39) and SMA (n = 18). Differential expression
analyses reveal 1403 up-regulated and 279 down-regulated transcripts in SMA,
signifying impairments in host inflammasome activation, cell death, and innate
immune and cellular stress responses. Immune cell profiling shows decreased
memory responses, antigen presentation, and immediate pathogen clearance,
suggesting an immature/improperly regulated immune response in SMA.
Module repertoire analysis of blood-specific gene signatures identifies upregulation of erythroid genes, enhanced neutrophil activation, and impaired
inflammatory responses in SMA. Enrichment analyses converge on disruptions
in cellular homeostasis and regulatory pathways for the ubiquitin-proteasome
system, autophagy, and heme metabolism. Pathway analyses highlight activation in response to hypoxic conditions [Hypoxia Inducible Factor (HIF)−1
target and Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) signaling] as a central theme in
SMA. These signaling pathways are also top-ranking in protein abundance
measures and a Ugandan SMA cohort with available transcriptomic data.
Targeted RNA-Seq validation shows strong concordance with our entire
expressed transcriptome data. These findings identify key molecular themes in
SMA pathogenesis, offering potential targets for new malaria therapies.