Humoral response to a carboxyl-terminal region of the merozoite surface protein-1 plays a predominant role in controlling blood-stage infection in rodent malaria.

Journal of Immunology - Tập 155 Số 1 - Trang 236-243 - 1995
T M Daly1, Carol A. Long1
1Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19102, USA.

Tóm tắt

Abstract The developmental stages of malaria parasites that infect E are responsible for the morbidity and mortality associated with this disease. One of the leading candidates for a blood-stage vaccine against malaria is a surface protein of merozoites, the infectious stages for E, designated merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1). The rodent malarial parasite Plasmodium yoelii yoelii (Py) has provided a model system for the study of this Ag, and previous studies from our laboratory had demonstrated that the carboxyl-terminal, cysteine-rich region of MSP-1, when expressed in a native configuration, could immunize mice against a normally lethal challenge infection with Py. We have now prepared a new fusion construct with the glutathione-S-transferase gene of Schistosoma japonicum joined to the carboxyl-terminal 11 kDa of Py MSP-1. This includes only the two epidermal growth factor-like domains of the MSP-1 protein. When expressed in recombinant Escherichia coli, the fusion protein induces a strong protective response in BALB/c mice as judged by the resistance of immunized animals to a virulent challenge infection. Moreover, we demonstrate that this resistance can be transferred passively by immune serum or by purified Ig, establishing a significant role for humoral immunity in protection. No role for CD4+ or CD8+ T cells could be identified in the first 12 days after challenge infection in immune mice selectively depleted of these cells; however, after this time, parasitemias gradually increased in mice depleted of CD4+ T cells, suggesting an active host response is necessary to completely eliminate the infection.

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