| Literature DB >> 30133707 |
Weidong Zhang1,2, Adebayo J Molehin1,2, Juan U Rojo3, Justin Sudduth1,2, Pramodh K Ganapathy1,2, Eunjee Kim1,2, Arif J Siddiqui1,2, Jasmin Freeborn1,2, Souad R Sennoune1,2, Jordan May1,2, Samra Lazarus1,2, Catherine Nguyen1,2, Whitni K Redman1,2, Gul Ahmad4, Workineh Torben5, Souvik Karmakar6, Loc Le7, Kameswara R Kottapalli8, Pratibha Kottapalli8, Roman F Wolf9, James F Papin10, David Carey10, Sean A Gray11, Jenn D Bergthold11, Raymond T Damian12, Bryan T Mayer13, Florian Marks14,15, Steven G Reed16, Darrick Carter11,16, Afzal A Siddiqui1,2.
Abstract
Schistosomiasis is of public health importance to an estimated one billion people in 79 countries. A vaccine is urgently needed. Here, we report the results of four independent, double-blind studies of an Sm-p80-based vaccine in baboons. The vaccine exhibited potent prophylactic efficacy against transmission of Schistosoma mansoni infection and was associated with significantly less egg-induced pathology, compared with unvaccinated control animals. Specifically, the vaccine resulted in a 93.45% reduction of pathology-producing female worms and significantly resolved the major clinical manifestations of hepatic/intestinal schistosomiasis by reducing the tissue egg-load by 89.95%. A 35-fold decrease in fecal egg excretion in vaccinated animals, combined with an 81.51% reduction in hatching of eggs into the snail-infective stage (miracidia), demonstrates the parasite transmission-blocking potential of the vaccine. Substantially higher Sm-p80 expression in female worms and Sm-p80-specific antibodies in vaccinated baboons appear to play an important role in vaccine-mediated protection. Preliminary analyses of RNA sequencing revealed distinct molecular signatures of vaccine-induced effects in baboon immune effector cells. This study provides comprehensive evidence for the effectiveness of an Sm-p80-based vaccine for schistosomiasis.Entities:
Keywords: Schistosoma mansoni; Sm-p80 vaccine; baboons; efficacy; schistosomiasis; systems biology
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30133707 PMCID: PMC6110104 DOI: 10.1111/nyas.13942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci ISSN: 0077-8923 Impact factor: 5.691