| Literature DB >> 19500406 |
Tonia Woodberry1, Alberto Pinzon-Charry, Kim A Piera, Yawalak Panpisutchai, Christian R Engwerda, Denise L Doolan, Ervi Salwati, Enny Kenangalem, Emiliana Tjitra, Ric N Price, Michael F Good, Nicholas M Anstey.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Plasmodium purine salvage enzyme, hypoxanthine guanine xanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGXPRT) can protect mice against Plasmodium yoelii pRBC challenge in a T cell-dependent manner and has, therefore, been proposed as a novel vaccine candidate. It is not known whether natural exposure to Plasmodium falciparum stimulates HGXPRT T cell reactivity in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19500406 PMCID: PMC2700129 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-8-122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Patients with acute and convalescent malaria in which proliferative responses were tested
| HGXPRT proliferation | No HGXPRT proliferation | ||
| Subjects | 15 | 19 | 12 |
| Mean age (range) | 24 (7–55) | 25 (12–44) | 25 (8–43) |
| Female/male | 6/9 | 7/12 | 5/7 |
| Mean parasites/μL (range) | 13 153 (2 324–30 800) | 24 102 (255–305 200) | 0 |
* responses were not stratified by HGXPRT proliferation due to the paucity of proliferation at day 28.
Patients with acute and convalescent malaria in which ELISPOT responses were tested
| HGXPRT response | No HGXPRT response | ||
| Subjects | 12 | 10 | 9 |
| Mean age (range) | 25 (3–50) | 23 (13–43) | 30 (7–60) |
| Female/male | 2/10 | 4/6 | 4/5 |
| Mean parasites/μL (range) | 4911 (423–15 912) | 0 | 0 |
* responses were not stratified by HGXPRT recognition due to the paucity of IFNγ secretion at day 0.
Figure 1Lymphocyte proliferation to HGXPRT in acute and convalescent malaria. CD4+ and CD8+ T cell division following PBMC stimulation with HGXPRT expressed as the percentage of CFSE dim cells following background subtraction. A. PBMC response in 34 acute (day 0) and 12 convalescent (day 28) subjects. The proportion with proliferation at day 28 was significantly less than at day 0 (p = 0.035). No HGXPRT proliferation was detected in 15 malaria unexposed controls. The horizontal solid line represents the group median and the dotted line the background cut-off for positive responses. B. Longitudinal HGXPRT responses in 5 subjects during acute malaria (day 0) and 7 and 28 days after drug treatment.
Figure 2Loss of proliferation to HGXPRT following CD4. Detection of HGXPRT-specific CD4+ or CD8+ T cells from a representative patient with acute falciparum malaria; (A) before and (B) after CD4+ T cell depletion. Day 6 CFSE CD8+ and CD4+ T cell proliferative responses in response to (C) no antigen and (D) HGXPRT before and (E) after CD4+ T cell depletion. The percentages represent the proportion of CFSE low CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in culture. A similar result was observed in two other subjects.
Figure 3. Sections highlighted in grey, and marked with an asterix [*] show identical amino acids in the four sequences. A colon [:] indicates highly conserved amino acids and a single dot [.] indicates reasonable conservation between the Plasmodial (accession number; XP_001614435, P07833, P20035) and human HG(X)PRT (NP_000185) sequences.
Figure 4Lymphocyte IFN-γ secretion to HGXPRT in acute and convalescent malaria: Ex-vivo ELISPOT detection of IFN-γ secretion following HGXPRT stimulation. PBMC responses in 12 acute (day 0) and 19 convalescent (day 28) subjects are shown after background subtraction. Spot forming cells were significantly more numerous during convalescence (p = 0.04). The horizontal solid line represents the group median and the dotted line the background cut-off for positive responses.
Figure 5Antibody responses to . Plasma IgG responses in 37 unexposed donors, 85 malaria exposed asymptomatic controls and 80 people with acute malaria (72 tested for MSP5 recognition). The solid line represents the group median and the dotted line the cut-off for positive responses as defined in the methods.