| Literature DB >> 31060594 |
Kazutoyo Miura1, Bruce J Swihart2, Bingbing Deng3, Luwen Zhou3, Thao P Pham3, Ababacar Diouf3, Michael P Fay2, Carole A Long3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective malaria transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs) can support malaria eradication programmes, and the standard membrane-feeding assay (SMFA) has been used as a "gold standard" assay for TBV development. However, in SMFA, the inhibitory activity is commonly measured at oocyst stage of parasites, while it is the sporozoites which transmit malaria from a mosquito to a human. A handful of studies have shown that there is a positive correlation between oocyst and sporozoite intensities. However, no study has been completed to compare inhibition levels in oocyst and sporozoite intensities in the presence of transmission-blocking (TB) antibodies.Entities:
Keywords: Malaria; Oocyst; Sporozoite; Standard membrane-feeding assay; Transmission-blocking vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31060594 PMCID: PMC6501457 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-019-3470-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Correlation between average oocyst intensity and average sporozoite intensity. Arithmetic mean (Ave) of oocysts and sporozoites were calculated for each COM from 13 independent experiments. Nine COMs were fed with normal human serum (NHS), and 15 COMs with transmission-blocking antibodies (TB antibody). The same data are presented in either a linear-scale (a) or a Log-scale (b). The dotted line in each panel is the best-fit line for all data sets. A total of 532 mosquitoes were analyzed for oocysts, and 415 for sporozoites
Fig. 2Generating a mathematical model for sporozoite data. For each COM, average and standard deviation of sporozoite values were calculated. The data from mosquitoes fed with NHS (13 COMs with 188 mosquitoes) were utilized to build a zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB) model. The dotted line is the best-fit line calculated from the ZINB model, not the best-fit of all NHS and TB antibody data points. The fitness of the model to the mosquitoes fed with TB antibodies (15COMs with 227 mosquitoes) was R2 = 0.707
Fig. 3Concordance between inhibitions in oocysts and sporozoites. Inhibition levels in oocyst and sporozoite intensities were compared in the %TRA-scale (a) and the Log Mean Ratios (LMR)-scale (b). In b, the associated % inhibition (%TRA) value is shown on the right side of the y-axis or the top side of the x-axis. The best estimate and 95% CI for each test COM are shown. Points with the same symbol are from the same feed, and the dotted line is y = x. The red squires show the SMFA data with anti-Pfs48/45 antibody, and the other symbols with anti-Pfs25 antibodies
Fig. 4Bland–Altman prediction intervals for two measurements. The Bland–Altman prediction intervals (red and blue dotted lines) were calculated between (i) LMRs in oocysts and in sporozoites in the same COM (Ooc-vs-Spz; measured in this study), and (ii) LMRs in oocysts from two independent feeds, i.e. data from two different COMs (Ooc-vs-Ooc; reanalysis of previously reported SMFA data), using data where average LMR < 1.3 (average %TRA < 95%), as described in the supplemental material. a Bland–Altman plot of LMRs in oocysts and in sporozoites. b Each dot represents %TRA in oocysts and in sporozoites for each COM, and the prediction intervals were transformed to the %TRA-scale. The same symbols are used for the same COMs in Figs. 3 and 4