| Literature DB >> 26475447 |
Amed Ouattara1, Alyssa E Barry2, Sheetij Dutta3, Edmond J Remarque4, James G Beeson5, Christopher V Plowe6.
Abstract
Prospects for malaria eradication will be greatly enhanced by an effective vaccine, but parasite genetic diversity poses a major impediment to malaria vaccine efficacy. In recent pre-clinical and field trials, vaccines based on polymorphic Plasmodium falciparum antigens have shown efficacy only against homologous strains, raising the specter of allele-specific immunity such as that which plagues vaccines against influenza and HIV. The most advanced malaria vaccine, RTS,S, targets relatively conserved epitopes on the P. falciparum circumsporozoite protein. After more than 40 years of development and testing, RTS,S, has shown significant but modest efficacy against clinical malaria in phase 2 and 3 trials. Ongoing phase 2 studies of an irradiated sporozoite vaccine will ascertain whether the full protection against homologous experimental malaria challenge conferred by high doses of a whole organism vaccine can provide protection against diverse strains in the field. Here we review and evaluate approaches being taken to design broadly cross-protective malaria vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: Allele-specific efficacy; Cross-protection; Diversity; Heterologous; Malaria; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26475447 PMCID: PMC4731100 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641
Malaria vaccines and allele-specific efficacy.
| Vaccine | Antigen | Stage | Allele-specific efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RTS,S | Circumsporozoite protein (CSP) | Pre-erythrocytic | No | [ |
| AMA1-C1 | Apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) | Erythrocytic | No | [ |
| FMP2.1/AS01 | Apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) | Erythrocytic | Yes | [ |
| Combination B | Merozoite surface protein 2 (MSP2), MSP1 Ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigen (RESA) | Erythrocytic | Yes | [ |
| SPf66 | Merozoite surface protein 2 (MSP1) | Erythrocytic | Yes | [ |
Fig. 1Effect of allele-specific efficacy on breakthrough infections. The malaria vaccine contains two variants (red and cyan) of a polymorphic antigen (A). When an individual is infected by five different parasites with five variants (cyan, red, dark blue, yellow and green) of the same proteins (B), malaria clinical episodes with homologous (red and cyan) and closely related variants (dark blue) are prevented (C). Heterologous variants (yellow and green) may increase within the individual and the whole population (D, E).
Fig. 2Screening procedure for the design of a broadly efficacious subunit malaria vaccine. The first step of the selection process consists of using field samples to assess the baseline genetic diversity of vaccine candidate antigens. Selected antigen candidates are then expressed and used to produce polyclonal antibodies. Following this step, in vitro functional assays are conducted followed by a clinical trial in non-human primate for successful candidates.