| Literature DB >> 30894432 |
Albert E Zhou1, Andrea A Berry1, Jason A Bailey2, Andrew Pike1, Antoine Dara3, Sonia Agrawal1, Emily M Stucke1, Amed Ouattara1, Drissa Coulibaly3, Kirsten E Lyke1, Matthew B Laurens1, Matthew Adams1, Shannon Takala-Harrison1, Jozelyn Pablo4, Algis Jasinskas4, Rie Nakajima4, Amadou Niangaly3, Bourema Kouriba3, Abdoulaye K Kone3, J Alexandra Rowe5, Ogobara K Doumbo3, Mahamadou A Thera3, Jigar J Patel6, John C Tan6, Philip L Felgner4, Christopher V Plowe7, Mark A Travassos8.
Abstract
The repetitive interspersed family (RIFIN) and the subtelomeric variable open reading frame (STEVOR) family represent two of three major Plasmodium falciparum variant surface antigen families involved in malaria pathogenesis and immune evasion and are potential targets in the development of natural immunity. Protein and peptide microarrays populated with RIFINs and STEVORs associated with severe malaria vulnerability in Malian children were probed with adult and pediatric sera to identify epitopes that reflect malaria exposure. Adult sera recognized and reacted with greater intensity to all STEVOR proteins than pediatric sera did. Serorecognition of and seroreactivity to peptides within the semiconserved domain of STEVORs increased with age and seasonal malaria exposure, while serorecognition and seroreactivity increased for the semiconserved and second hypervariable domains of RIFINs only with age. Serologic responses to RIFIN and STEVOR peptides within the semiconserved domains may play a role in natural immunity to severe malaria.IMPORTANCE Malaria, an infectious disease caused by the parasite Plasmodium falciparum, causes nearly 435,000 deaths annually worldwide. RIFINs and STEVORs are two variant surface antigen families that are involved in malaria pathogenesis and immune evasion. Recent work has shown that a lack of humoral immunity to these proteins is associated with severe malaria vulnerability in Malian children. This is the first study to have compared serologic responses of children and adults to RIFINs and STEVORs in settings of malaria endemicity and to examine such serologic responses before and after a clinical malaria episode. Using microarrays, we determined that the semiconserved domains in these two parasite variant surface antigen families harbor peptides whose seroreactivity reflects malaria exposure. A similar approach has the potential to illuminate the role of variant surface antigens in the development of natural immunity to clinical malaria. Potential vaccines for severe malaria should include consideration of peptides within the semiconserved domains of RIFINs and STEVORs.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium falciparumzzm321990; RIFIN; STEVOR; malaria; microarrays; peptide; semiconserved domain; severe malaria; variant surface antigen
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30894432 PMCID: PMC6429043 DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00097-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSphere ISSN: 2379-5042 Impact factor: 4.389
FIG 1General structure of RIFINs and STEVORs. Protein domains are illustrated as green (signal peptide [SP]), gray (short hypervariable domain [V1] and hypervariable domain [V2]), red (transmembrane domains [TM]), black (PEXEL motif), blue (25-amino-acid sequence found only in RIFIN-A antigens), or orange/purple (semiconserved [SC] or conserved [C] domain). RIFINs are encoded by 160 rif genes in the 3D7 reference genome, separated into two subtypes, RIFIN-A and RIFIN-B, depending on sequence, number of transmembrane domains, and subcellular localization. Thirty 3D7 genes encode STEVORs, which are structurally similar to RIFIN-Bs.
Sera from Malian adults recognized a greater number of STEVORs than pediatric sera
| Surface antigen | Serorecognition | |
|---|---|---|
| Adults ( | Children ( | |
| RIFINs | ||
| PF3D7_0732400 | ✓ | ✓ |
| PF3D7_1041100 | ✓ | ✓ |
| PF3D7_0732400 | ✓ | ✓ |
| STEVORs | ||
| PF3D7_1300900 | ✓ | ✓ |
| PF3D7_0832000 | ✓ | X |
| PF3D7_0832600 | ✓ | X |
| PF3D7_0300400 | ✓ | ✓ |
| PF3D7_0115400 | ✓ | ✓ |
| PF3D7_1254100 | ✓ | ✓ |
✓, serorecognition; X, lack of serorecognition.
FIG 2Protein microarray seroreactivity of three RIFINs (black) and six STEVORs (purple). Malian adult sera exhibited greater seroreactivity to all six STEVORs than pediatric sera. There were no significant differences between adult and pediatric seroreactivity to the three RIFINs. Data representing fluorescence intensity (FI) for sera from adults (n = 18) and children (n = 75) were compared using a Mann-Whitney test (**, P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001). The y axis shows seroreactivity represented by mean fluorescence intensity. Each box plot shows the median, bracketed by the lower 25th and upper 75th percentiles, and the minimum and maximum values.
FIG 3Malaria-exposed adults (n = 10) demonstrated greater serorecognition of and seroreactivity to peptides of three RIFINs (A and C) and six STEVORs (B and D) than children (n = 10) as measured using peptide microarrays. (A and B) Malian adult sera (red) recognized significantly more (A) RIFIN and (B) STEVOR total peptides than preseason pediatric sera (blue). The horizontal axis depicts the relative location of the N-terminal amino acid for each peptide. ***, significant difference between adults and children in serorecognized peptide counts (P < 0.05; McNemar’s test). (C and D) Malian adult sera (red) had increased seroreactivity to subsets of (C) RIFIN and (D) STEVOR peptides compared with pediatric sera (blue) (P values are indicated in gray on the secondary y axis; Wilcoxon rank-sum test).
Summary of peptide serorecognition comparisons for the domains of three RIFINs and six STEVORs
| Surface antigen and serum group | No. of peptides recognized ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | V1 | SC | V2 | |
| RIFIN | ||||
| Adults vs Pediatric | ||||
| PF3D7_0833200 | 143 vs 12*** | 19 vs 0** | 35 vs 9*** | 73 vs 3*** |
| PF3D7_1041100 | 114 vs 31*** | 3 vs 0 (0.617) | 32 vs 17*** | 55 vs 13*** |
| PF3D7_0732400 | 187 vs 39*** | 15 vs 4** | 26 vs 16** | 120 vs 19*** |
| Pediatric Infected—day 90 vs day 0 | ||||
| PF3D7_0833200 | 99 vs 27*** | 15 vs 3 (0.480) | 39 vs 13 (0.134) | 28 vs 9*** |
| PF3D7_1041100 | 88 vs 50** | 5 vs 5 (1) | 37 vs 23 (0.480) | 34 vs 18 (0.077) |
| PF3D7_0732400 | 139 vs 67*** | 12 vs 8 (0.131) | 30 vs 16*** | 77 vs 34** |
| STEVORs | ||||
| Adults vs Pediatric | ||||
| PF3D7_1254100 | 135 vs 40*** | 13 vs 1** | 80 vs 26*** | 17 vs 0*** |
| PF3D7_0832000 | 112 vs 1*** | 7 vs 0* | 54 vs 1*** | 27 vs 0*** |
| PF3D7_0300400 | 135 vs 38*** | 5 vs 0 (0.134) | 85 vs 34*** | 22 vs 1*** |
| PF3D7_0115400 | 132 vs 38*** | 4 vs 0 (0.371) | 81 vs 31*** | 24 vs 4*** |
| PF3D7_1300900 | 133 vs 32*** | 3 vs 0 (0.617) | 80 vs 26*** | 22 vs 3*** |
| PF3D7_0832600 | 140 vs 10*** | 9 vs 1* | 80 vs 8*** | 29 vs 1*** |
| Pediatric infected—day 90 vs day 0 | ||||
| PF3D7_1254100 | 106 vs 62*** | 13 vs 4 (0.248) | 71 vs 49** | 8 vs 2 (1) |
| PF3D7_0832000 | 64 vs 13*** | 1 vs 0 (1) | 32 vs 9*** | 16 vs 4 (0.617) |
| PF3D7_0300400 | 105 vs 62*** | 8 vs 1 (0.617) | 67 vs 54** | 15 vs 3 (0.134) |
| PF3D7_0115400 | 107 vs 59*** | 3 vs 0 (1) | 77 vs 28** | 13 vs 9 (1) |
| PF3D7_1300900 | 115 vs 58*** | 7 vs 0 (1) | 79 vs 45*** | 13 vs 6* |
| PF3D7_0832600 | 82 vs 23*** | 9 vs 1 (0.134) | 56 vs 18 *** | 5 vs 2 (0.480) |
*, P < 0.01; **, P < 0.001; ***, P < 0.0001.
FIG 4Children with recent clinical malaria episodes (n = 6) exhibited increased serological responses to three RIFINs (A and C) and six STEVORs (B and D) during the transmission season as measured using peptide microarrays. (A and B) Day 90 pediatric sera (maroon) recognized significantly more (A) RIFIN and (B) STEVOR peptides in total than the same day 0 pediatric sera from before the malaria season (blue). The x axis depicts the peptide number corresponding to the sequence from the N terminus to the C terminus for each respective antigen. ***, significant difference in serorecognized peptide counts between day 0 and day 90 (P < 0.05; McNemar’s test). (C and D) Day 90 sera (maroon) had increased seroreactivity to subsets of (C) RIFIN and (D) STEVOR peptides compared with matched sera before the malaria transmission season (blue) (P values in gray; Wilcoxon signed-rank test).
FIG 5Peptides that were both serorecognized and differentially seroreactive in group comparisons were present in both RIFINs and STEVORs and captured differences in ages and seasonal exposures. These peptides for adult-child comparisons were present in all (A) three RIFINs and (B) six STEVORs, including within the second variable (V2) domain for RIFINs and in both the semiconserved (SC) and second variable (V2) domain for STEVORs. These peptides corresponding to matched pediatric seasonal comparisons were sparse and not uniformly located within the three RIFINs (C), whereas the SC domain consistently harbored such peptides in the STEVORs (D). The number of these peptides is listed to the right of each protein designation.