Does malarial tolerance, through nitric oxide, explain the low incidence of autoimmune disease in tropical Africa?

被引:37
作者
Clark, IA
AlYaman, FM
Cowden, WB
Rockett, KA
机构
[1] AUSTRALIAN NATL UNIV,JOHN CURTIN SCH MED RES,CANBERRA,ACT 2601,AUSTRALIA
[2] JOHN RADCLIFFE HOSP,DEPT PAEDIAT,OXFORD OX3 9DU,ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0140-6736(96)07342-4
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Autoimmune disease is generally rare in tropical rural populations. Plasma concentrations of nitrite plus nitrate (reactive nitrogen intermediates), reflecting high nitric-oxide production somewhere in the body, can be high in patients who have cerebral malaria, but even higher in symptom-free parasitised individuals, who are termed malaria-tolerant. We propose that the nitric oxide causing high serum levels of reactive nitrogen intermediates in malaria-tolerant individuals is generated in macrophages during the establishment and maintenance of malarial tolerance, and makes autoimmune disease rare in many tropical rural populations by minimising proliferation of autoreactive T cells. Conversely, innately low levels of nitric-oxide generation in these populations, selected by malarial disease in tropical areas, could rationalise their high frequency of autoimmune disease and hypertension when living in western societies.
引用
收藏
页码:1492 / 1494
页数:3
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