Naturally acquired immunity against immature Plasmodium falciparum gametocytes.

Kathleen W Dantzler ORCID logo; Siyuan Ma; Priscilla Ngotho ORCID logo; Will JR Stone ORCID logo; Dingyin Tao ORCID logo; Sanna Rijpma ORCID logo; Mariana De Niz; Sandra K Nilsson Bark; Matthijs M Jore; Tonke K Raaijmakers; +21 more... Angela M Early; Ceereena Ubaida-Mohien; Leandro Lemgruber ORCID logo; Joseph J Campo ORCID logo; Andy A Teng; Timothy Q Le ORCID logo; Cassidy L Walker; Patricia Hermand; Philippe Deterre ORCID logo; D Huw Davies; Phil Felgner; Isabelle Morlais ORCID logo; Dyann F Wirth ORCID logo; Daniel E Neafsey; Rhoel R Dinglasan ORCID logo; Miriam Laufer ORCID logo; Curtis Huttenhower ORCID logo; Karl Seydel ORCID logo; Terrie Taylor; Teun Bousema ORCID logo; Matthias Marti; (2019) Naturally acquired immunity against immature Plasmodium falciparum gametocytes. SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 11 (495). eaav3963-eaav3963. ISSN 1946-6234 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aav3963
Copy

The recent decline in global malaria burden has stimulated efforts toward Plasmodium falciparum elimination. Understanding the biology of malaria transmission stages may provide opportunities to reduce or prevent onward transmission to mosquitoes. Immature P. falciparum transmission stages, termed stages I to IV gametocytes, sequester in human bone marrow before release into the circulation as mature stage V gametocytes. This process likely involves interactions between host receptors and potentially immunogenic adhesins on the infected red blood cell (iRBC) surface. Here, we developed a flow cytometry assay to examine immune recognition of live gametocytes of different developmental stages by naturally exposed Malawians. We identified strong antibody recognition of the earliest immature gametocyte-iRBCs (giRBCs) but not mature stage V giRBCs. Candidate surface antigens (n = 30), most of them shared between asexual- and gametocyte-iRBCs, were identified by mass spectrometry and mouse immunizations, as well as correlations between responses by protein microarray and flow cytometry. Naturally acquired responses to a subset of candidate antigens were associated with reduced asexual and gametocyte density, and plasma samples from malaria-infected individuals were able to induce immune clearance of giRBCs in vitro. Infected RBC surface expression of select candidate antigens was validated using specific antibodies, and genetic analysis revealed a subset with minimal variation across strains. Our data demonstrate that humoral immune responses to immature giRBCs and shared iRBC antigens are naturally acquired after malaria exposure. These humoral immune responses may have consequences for malaria transmission potential by clearing developing gametocytes, which could be leveraged for malaria intervention.


picture_as_pdf
Naturally-acquired-immunity-against-immature-Plasmodium-falciparum-gametocytes.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads