| Literature DB >> 29263882 |
Brandon K Sack1, Sebastian A Mikolajczak1, Matthew Fishbaugher1, Ashley M Vaughan1, Erika L Flannery1, Thao Nguyen1, Will Betz1, Mary Jane Navarro1, Lander Foquet1, Ryan W J Steel1, Zachary P Billman2, Sean C Murphy1,2, Stephen L Hoffman3, Sumana Chakravarty3, B Kim Lee Sim3, Marije Behet4, Isaie J Reuling4, Jona Walk4, Anja Scholzen4, Robert W Sauerwein4, Andrew S Ishizuka5, Barbara Flynn5, Robert A Seder5, Stefan H I Kappe1,6.
Abstract
A malaria vaccine that prevents infection will be an important new tool in continued efforts of malaria elimination, and such vaccines are under intense development for the major human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum (Pf). Antibodies elicited by vaccines can block the initial phases of parasite infection when sporozoites are deposited into the skin by mosquito bite and then target the liver for further development. However, there are currently no standardized in vivo preclinical models that can measure the inhibitory activity of antibody specificities against Pf sporozoite infection via mosquito bite. Here, we use human liver-chimeric mice as a challenge model to assess prevention of natural Pf sporozoite infection by antibodies. We demonstrate that these mice are consistently infected with Pf by mosquito bite and that this challenge can be combined with passive transfer of either monoclonal antibodies or polyclonal human IgG from immune serum to measure antibody-mediated blocking of parasite infection using bioluminescent imaging. This methodology is useful to down-select functional antibodies and to investigate mechanisms or immune correlates of protection in clinical trials, thereby informing rational vaccine optimization.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29263882 PMCID: PMC5634440 DOI: 10.1038/s41541-017-0028-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Vaccines ISSN: 2059-0105 Impact factor: 7.344
Fig. 1FRG huHep mice are susceptible to P. falciparum infection by mosquito bite and parasite liver stage burden can be measured noninvasively by bioluminescent imaging. a Overall schematic of passive transfer and mosquito bite infection of FRG huHep mice. Mice are administered antibody 16–24 h prior to infection with Pf GFP_luc-infected mosquitoes followed by subsequent assessment of liver stage burden by bioluminescence at 4–6 days post infection. b Mice were exposed to the bites of 25, 50, 75 or 100 mosquitoes and tracked for liver stage burden from days 4–6. Individual mice are shown as data points with the mean for each group shown by the color-corresponding connecting line
Mean liver burden and variation at day 6 post infection
| Mosquito bites |
| Mean liver burden (p/s) | SD | SEM | Coefficient of variation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | 10 | 0.839 × 107 | 0.686 × 107 | 0.217 × 107 | 81.7% |
| 50 | 10 | 1.74 × 107 | 1.451 × 107 | 0.459 × 107 | 83.4% |
| 75 | 10 | 1.91 × 107 | 1.623 × 107 | 0.514 × 107 | 85% |
| 100 | 10 | 2.31 × 107 | 1.852 × 107 | 0.586 × 107 | 80.2% |
Fig. 2Bioluminescent imaging is as accurate as qRT-PCR for assessment of liver stage burden. a Schematic representing liver sampling with qRT-PCR (upper panels) and bioluminescence (lower panels). Sampling of livers with biopsy punch for qRT-PCR is indicated by 12 circles where green circles indicate samples in which parasite RNA would be detected and red those which would be negative in mice with high liver burden (left) and low liver burden (right). In contrast, assessment of liver burden by bioluminescence is shown in the bottom panels and indicates a representative region of interest that can capture the entire liver. b FRG huHep mice were administered indicated doses of anti-CSP mAb 2A10 or 150 μg of non-specific murine IgG (mock). The following day, mice were infected with 50 Pf GFP_luc mosquito bites and assessed for liver burden at day 6 by bioluminescent imaging. Immediately following imaging, mice were sacrificed and 12 samples from each liver were collected and combined for RNA isolation and quantitation of liver burden by qRT-PCR. Liver burden by both qRT-PCR (left y-axis) and bioluminescence (right y-axis) are shown with each data point representing the mean liver burden from the 12 liver sections from one mouse for qRT-PCR and the total flux for each mouse measured by bioluminescence
Fig. 3Monoclonal Abs of multiple Fc isotypes and species can be assessed in the FRG huHep/Pf GFP_luc challenge model. FRG huHep mice received 150 μg/mouse of non-specific IgG, mAb 2A10 or two novel anti-CSP mAb prior to mosquito bite infection and measurement of liver stage burden. Species and isotype are indicated for each mAb (e.g., mIgG1 for “murine IgG1” and “hu” for human). Data were collected over four independent experiments with 1–3 experiments/mAb and 4–5 mice/group/experiment. Each data point represents one mouse and mice within the same experiment are labeled in the same color. Bars indicate mean ± SEM with numbers above each bar indicating the mean % of mock for that group. Asterisks indicate statistical significance in one-way ANOVA comparing to mock-injected mice in the same independent experiments. Individual comparisons between mAb of the same specificity but different Fc isotypes/species are indicated with lines. ** is 0.01 > p > 0.001, **** is p < 0.0001
Fig. 4Human polyclonal IgG can be used over a wide dose range in the FRG huHep/Pf GFP_luc challenge model. FRG huHep mice (n = 4–5/group) received indicated doses of pooled pre-immune or immune polyclonal IgG at indicated doses. a Parasite liver stage burden was measured at day 6 post 50 mosquito bite challenge and the liver stage burden of each mouse receiving huIgG from immunized volunteers (Immune) was normalized to the average of the dose-matched huIgG from the pre-immunized volunteers (Pre-immune). Mean ± SEM is plotted with comparisons between pre-immune and immune liver stage burdens carried out by Mann–Whitney U test. Asterisks indicate a significant difference between means where * is p < 0.05 and ** is p ≤ 0.01. b Mice were bled immediately prior to challenge and serum was collected for measurement of circulating huIgG by ELISA. Concentration is depicted on the y-axis with mean ± SEM plotted for each group. Included are groups of mice that received a murine anti-CSP mAb or PBS (negative controls, n = 2 and 6, respectively)
Fig. 5The FRG huHep/Pf GFP_luc challenge model can distinguish functional from non-functional antibodies from human volunteers. FRG huHep mice were administered 8 mg/mouse of IgG from volunteers 6 months after immunization with four doses of 2.7 × 105 irradiated sporozoites (PfSPZ) and immediately prior to challenge by infectious mosquito bite. Mice were then infected by bite of 50 Pf GFP_luc-infected mosquitos and liver stage burden assessed at day 6 post infection. Data shown are a combination of two independent experiments as delineated in Figure S4 and expressed as a percent of pre-immune parasite liver burden (% of pre-immune). a Liver stage burdens of mice (n = 3–10/volunteer) receiving post-immunization IgG were normalized to mice receiving pooled pre-immune IgG (n = 13). Data points are shown with bars as mean ± SEM for each volunteer grouped by protection status. Asterisks indicate significant differences from the pre-immune group as measured by one-way ANOVA with Kruskal–Wallis post-test. b Data in a arranged such that each mouse is plotted as a single data point and grouped according to their treatment, pre-immune huIgG, immune huIgG from a CHMI protected volunteer or immune huIgG from a non-protected CHMI volunteer. Above each group is the mean % of pre-immune as well as asterisks indicating a significant difference from the mean of the pre-immune group as measured by one-way ANOVA with Kruskal-Wallis post-test. An additional Mann–Whitney test comparing the means of protected and non-protected is indicated by bar and resulting p value. c Data represented as one mean per volunteer with Mann-Whitney test used to determine if the mean % of mock are different. For all comparisons ** is p ≤ 0.01, *** is p ≤ 0.001 and **** is p ≤ 0.0001
Fig. 6Antibody function in the FRG huHep/Pf GFP_luc challenge model can be used as a correlate of protection. FRG huHep were administered 5 mg/mouse of IgG collected from volunteers either before (“Pre-Imm”) or 2 weeks after three immunizations with 15 Pf-infected mosquito bites under chloroquine prophylaxis. Mice were infected by the bite of 50 Pf GFP_luc-infected mosquitos and liver burden assessed at day 6 post infection. a Parasite liver stage burdens of mice (n = 3–5/volunteer) receiving pooled pre-immunization or individual post-immunization huIgG were normalized to mice receiving an equivalent volume of PBS (% of PBS). Data points are shown with bars as mean ± SEM for each volunteer and grouped by protection status. Asterisks indicate significant differences from the pre-immune group as measured by one-way ANOVA with Kruskal–Wallis post-test. b Data in a but arranged such that each mouse is plotted as a single data point and grouped by treatment with pre-immune huIgG, immune huIgG from a protected volunteer or immune huIgG from a non-protected volunteer. Above each group is the mean % of PBS as well as asterisks indicating a significant difference from the mean of pre-immune as measured by one-way ANOVA with Kruskal–Wallis post-test. An additional Mann–Whitney test comparing the means of protected and non-protected is indicated by bar and resulting p value. c Data represented as one mean per volunteer with Mann–Whitney test used to determine if the mean % of PBS between mice receiving protected and non-protected huIgG are different. For all comparisons * is p < 0.05 and ** is p ≤ 0.01
Fig. 7The FRG huHep/Pf challenge model can be used to assess sterile protection. FRG huHep mice (n = 4–5 mice/group) were administered indicated dose of mAb 2A10 or non-specific mIgG 1 day prior to challenge by bite of five PfNF54-infected mosquitos. On day 6.5, mice were iv-injected with 400 μL of human red blood cells at 70% hematocrit. On day 7, peripheral blood was collected and used to assess presence of parasitemia by qRT-PCR. a Copies/mL of parasite 18S rRNA for each indicated dose of mAb 2A10 with negative mice plotted on the x-axis. Data points are individual mice with bars representing the mean ± SEM for each group. As a negative qRT-PCR control, mIgG-treated mice were bled prior to blood stage transition on day 6 (“150 μg mIgG D6”). Comparions between mIgG and 2A10-treated groups were carried out by one-way ANOVA and Kruskall–Wallis post-test. Significant differences are indicated by asterisk where p < 0.05. b Serum was collected immediately prior to challenge and circulating levels of mAb 2A10 were measured by ELISA. Each data point is one mouse with bars representing mean ± SEM shown for each group and numerical mean above each data set