Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.

Clinical signs and symptoms of cerebral malaria in children are nonspecific and are seen in other common encephalopathies in malaria-endemic areas. This makes accurate diagnosis difficult in resource-poor settings. Novel malaria-specific diagnostic and prognostic methods are needed. We have used 2 p...

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Main Authors: Gitau, E, Kokwaro, G, Karanja, H, Newton, C, Ward, SA
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2013
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author Gitau, E
Kokwaro, G
Karanja, H
Newton, C
Ward, SA
author_facet Gitau, E
Kokwaro, G
Karanja, H
Newton, C
Ward, SA
author_sort Gitau, E
collection OXFORD
description Clinical signs and symptoms of cerebral malaria in children are nonspecific and are seen in other common encephalopathies in malaria-endemic areas. This makes accurate diagnosis difficult in resource-poor settings. Novel malaria-specific diagnostic and prognostic methods are needed. We have used 2 proteomic strategies to identify differentially expressed proteins in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid from children with a diagnosis of cerebral malaria, compared with those with a diagnosis of malaria-slide-negative acute bacterial meningitis and other nonspecific encephalopathies. Here we report the presence of differentially expressed proteins in cerebral malaria in both plasma and cerebrospinal fluid that could be used to better understand pathogenesis and help develop more-specific diagnostic methods. In particular, we report the expression of 2 spectrin proteins that have known Plasmodium falciparum-binding partners involved in the stability of the infected red blood cell, suppressing further invasion and possibly enhancing the red blood cell's ability to sequester in microvasculature.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1398731a-e6a4-466d-bb1a-7668753b7d092022-03-26T10:14:52ZPlasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1398731a-e6a4-466d-bb1a-7668753b7d09EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2013Gitau, EKokwaro, GKaranja, HNewton, CWard, SAClinical signs and symptoms of cerebral malaria in children are nonspecific and are seen in other common encephalopathies in malaria-endemic areas. This makes accurate diagnosis difficult in resource-poor settings. Novel malaria-specific diagnostic and prognostic methods are needed. We have used 2 proteomic strategies to identify differentially expressed proteins in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid from children with a diagnosis of cerebral malaria, compared with those with a diagnosis of malaria-slide-negative acute bacterial meningitis and other nonspecific encephalopathies. Here we report the presence of differentially expressed proteins in cerebral malaria in both plasma and cerebrospinal fluid that could be used to better understand pathogenesis and help develop more-specific diagnostic methods. In particular, we report the expression of 2 spectrin proteins that have known Plasmodium falciparum-binding partners involved in the stability of the infected red blood cell, suppressing further invasion and possibly enhancing the red blood cell's ability to sequester in microvasculature.
spellingShingle Gitau, E
Kokwaro, G
Karanja, H
Newton, C
Ward, SA
Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.
title Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.
title_full Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.
title_fullStr Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.
title_full_unstemmed Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.
title_short Plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies.
title_sort plasma and cerebrospinal proteomes from children with cerebral malaria differ from those of children with other encephalopathies
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