| Literature DB >> 30619241 |
Leslie S Itsara1, Yaxian Zhou1, Julie Do1, Alexis M Grieser1, Ashley M Vaughan2, Anil K Ghosh1.
Abstract
Each year malaria kills hundreds of thousands of people and infects hundreds of millions of people despite current control measures. An effective malaria vaccine will likely be necessary to aid in malaria eradication. Vaccination using whole sporozoites provides an increased repertoire of immunogens compared to subunit vaccines across at least two life cycle stages of the parasite, the extracellular sporozoite, and intracellular liver stage. Three potential whole sporozoite vaccine approaches are under development and include genetically attenuated parasites, radiation attenuated sporozoites, and wild-type sporozoites administered in combination with chemoprophylaxis. Pre-clinical and clinical studies have demonstrated whole sporozoite vaccine immunogenicity, including humoral and cellular immunity and a range of vaccine efficacy that depends on the pre-exposure of vaccinated individuals. While whole sporozoite vaccines can provide protection against malaria in some cases, more recent studies in malaria-endemic regions demonstrate the need for improvements. Moreover, challenges remain in manufacturing large quantities of sporozoites for vaccine commercialization. A promising solution to the whole sporozoite manufacturing challenge is in vitro culturing methodology, which has been described for several Plasmodium species, including the major disease-causing human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. Here, we review whole sporozoite vaccine immunogenicity and in vitro culturing platforms for sporozoite production.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium falciparum; genetically attenuated parasite; in vitro culturing; malaria; radiation attenuated sporozoite; whole sporozoite vaccines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30619241 PMCID: PMC6297750 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Plasmodium life cycle in mosquitoes and vertebrate hosts. The whole sporozite vaccine (WSV) strategy for radiation attenuated sporozoites (RAS), genetically attenuated parasites (GAP), and chemoprophylaxis with WT sporozoites (CPS) is shown in bold. The WSV immunogenicity provided by WSV administration is also listed.
Characteristics of in vitro sporozoite culturing systems for Plasmodium gallinaceum, falciparum, berghei and yoelli.
| Matrigel | Day 3–7 mm for elongate | 10–30% (mature) | Days 10 to 22 peaking on Day 16 | Morphology with anti-CSP staining | ||
| ( | In RPMI media | Days 5 to 7–up to 30 mm for spherical and up to 40 mm for elongated | 1–21 | |||
| Matrigel | Day 7–15 to 20 mm | N.D. | Days 12 to 16 | Morphology with anti-CSP staining | ||
| ( | In RPMI media | Days 10 to 12–25 to 40 mm | 0.4–1.3% | |||
| Matrigel | Day 15–up to 40 mm | 68% (mature) | Days 15 to 28 | Morphology with Giemsa staining; Infectivity in | ||
| ( | In Schneider's media | 0–18% | hepatocytes of mice observed with subsequent blood stage transition and then mosquito infection | |||
| Matrigel not required | Day 3–4 mm | 7.1% (early) | Days 6 to 30 | Morphology with anti-CSP staining; Infectivity of primary mouse hepatocytes and | ||
| ( | In Scheider's media | Days 6 to 7–10 mm | 0–75% | hepatocytes of mice observed with subsequent blood stage transition |
The features, including culture conditions, parasites observed, conversion frequency from ookinete to oocyst, and details of SPZ characterization are outlined and compared between culturing systems. For oocyst diameter, the observed oocysts were spherical unless otherwise noted. N.D, not described; RPMI, Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
The range is due to differences in Anopheles mosquito species tested.