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Redox Report
Communications in Free Radical Research
Volume 8, 2003 - Issue 5
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Articles

Sequestration: causes and consequences

Pages 295-299 | Published online: 19 Jul 2013
 

Abstract

Adhesion of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes to endothelial cells and to syncytiotrophoblasts lining the placenta is a key feature of malaria pathogenesis. P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1, a family of variable proteins, mediates adhesion to CD36 and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 in the systemic vasculature, and to chondroitin sulphate A and hyaluronic acid in the placenta. Recent studies of the pathology of fatal cerebral malaria and of placental malaria that follow such sequestration suggest that coagulation disturbances may have a greater role in pathogenesis than previously realized, and that monocyte infiltrates in response to malaria may initiate some of these changes. Chemokines such as macrophage inflammatory protein 1 α and β and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 may play a key role in attracting monocytes to the placenta and other organs, but the stimulus to chemokine secretion is not presently known.

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