| Literature DB >> 30257955 |
Anita Gola1,2, Daniel Silman1,3, Adam A Walters1, Saranya Sridhar1,3, Stefan Uderhardt2, Ahmed M Salman1,4, Benedict R Halbroth1, Duncan Bellamy1, Georgina Bowyer1, Jonathan Powlson1, Megan Baker1,3, Navin Venkatraman1,3, Ian Poulton1,3, Eleanor Berrie5, Rachel Roberts1,3, Alison M Lawrie1,3, Brian Angus6, Shahid M Khan4, Chris J Janse4, Katie J Ewer1, Ronald N Germain2, Alexandra J Spencer1, Adrian V S Hill7.
Abstract
Despite recent advances in treatment and vector control, malaria is still a leading cause of death, emphasizing the need for an effective vaccine. The malaria life cycle can be subdivided into three stages: the invasion and growth within liver hepatocytes (pre-erythrocytic stage), the blood stage (erythrocytic stage), and, finally, the sexual stage (occurring within the mosquito vector). Antigen (Ag)-specific CD8+ T cells are effectively induced by heterologous prime-boost viral vector immunization and known to correlate with liver-stage protection. However, liver-stage malaria vaccines have struggled to generate and maintain the high numbers of Plasmodium-specific circulating T cells necessary to confer sterile protection. We describe an alternative "prime and target" vaccination strategy aimed specifically at inducing high numbers of tissue-resident memory T cells present in the liver at the time of hepatic infection. This approach bypasses the need for very high numbers of circulating T cells and markedly increases the efficacy of subunit immunization against liver-stage malaria with clinically relevant Ags and clinically tested viral vectors in murine challenge models. Translation to clinical use has begun, with encouraging results from a pilot safety and feasibility trial of intravenous chimpanzee adenovirus vaccination in humans. This work highlights the value of a prime-target approach for immunization against malaria and suggests that this strategy may represent a more general approach for prophylaxis or immunotherapy of other liver infections and diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30257955 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aap9128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956