Journal article

Transcriptional profiling reveals suppressed erythropoiesis, up-regulated glycolysis, and interferon-associated responses in murine malaria

AC Sexton, RT Good, DS Hansen, MC D'Ombrain, L Buckingham, K Simpson, L Schofield

Journal of Infectious Diseases | Published : 2004

Abstract

The primary pathophysiological events contributing to fatal malaria are the cerebral syndrome, anemia, and lactic acidosis. The molecular basis of each event has been unclear. In the present study, microarray analysis of murine transcriptional responses during the development of severe disease revealed temporal, organ-specific, and pathway-specific patterns. More than 400 genes in the brain and 600 genes in the spleen displayed transcriptional changes. Dominant patterns revealed strongly suppressed erythropoiesis, starting early during infection, and highly up-regulated transcription of genes that control host glycolysis, including lactate dehydrogenase. The latter presents a mechanism that ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers