| Literature DB >> 27130708 |
Kaitian Peng1, Yun Shan Goh1, Anthony Siau2, Jean-François Franetich3,4, Wan Ni Chia1,5, Alice Soh Meoy Ong1, Benoit Malleret1, Ying Ying Wu1, Georges Snounou3,4, Cornelus C Hermsen6, John H Adams7, Dominique Mazier3,4,8, Peter R Preiser2, Robert W Sauerwein6, Anne-Charlotte Grüner1, Laurent Rénia1,5.
Abstract
The development of an effective malaria vaccine has remained elusive even until today. This is because of our incomplete understanding of the immune mechanisms that confer and/or correlate with protection. Human volunteers have been protected experimentally from a subsequent challenge by immunization with Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites under drug cover. Here, we demonstrate that sera from the protected individuals contain neutralizing antibodies against the pre-erythrocytic stage. To identify the antigen(s) recognized by these antibodies, a newly developed library of P. falciparum antigens was screened with the neutralizing sera. Antibodies from protected individuals recognized a broad antigenic repertoire of which three antigens, PfMAEBL, PfTRAP and PfSEA1 were recognized by most protected individuals. As a proof of principle, we demonstrated that anti-PfMAEBL antibodies block liver stage development in human hepatocytes. Thus, these antigens identified are promising targets for vaccine development against malaria.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27130708 PMCID: PMC5321637 DOI: 10.1111/cmi.12608
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Microbiol ISSN: 1462-5814 Impact factor: 3.715