| Literature DB >> 32718991 |
Todd J Suscovich1, Jonathan K Fallon1, Jishnu Das1, Allison R Demas1,2, Jonathan Crain1, Caitlyn H Linde1, Ashlin Michell1, Harini Natarajan3, Claudia Arevalo1, Thomas Broge1, Thomas Linnekin1, Viraj Kulkarni1, Richard Lu1, Matthew D Slein1, Corinne Luedemann1, Meghan Marquette2, Sandra March2, Joshua Weiner3, Scott Gregory4, Margherita Coccia5, Yevel Flores-Garcia6, Fidel Zavala6, Margaret E Ackerman3, Elke Bergmann-Leitner7, Jenny Hendriks8, Jerald Sadoff8, Sheetij Dutta7, Sangeeta N Bhatia2,9,10,11,12, Douglas A Lauffenburger9,13, Erik Jongert14, Ulrike Wille-Reece15, Galit Alter16.
Abstract
Vaccine development has the potential to be accelerated by coupling tools such as systems immunology analyses and controlled human infection models to define the protective efficacy of prospective immunogens without expensive and slow phase 2b/3 vaccine studies. Among human challenge models, controlled human malaria infection trials have long been used to evaluate candidate vaccines, and RTS,S/AS01 is the most advanced malaria vaccine candidate, reproducibly demonstrating 40 to 80% protection in human challenge studies in malaria-naïve individuals. Although antibodies are critical for protection after RTS,S/AS01 vaccination, antibody concentrations are inconsistently associated with protection across studies, and the precise mechanism(s) by which vaccine-induced antibodies provide protection remains enigmatic. Using a comprehensive systems serological profiling platform, the humoral correlates of protection against malaria were identified and validated across multiple challenge studies. Rather than antibody concentration, qualitative functional humoral features robustly predicted protection from infection across vaccine regimens. Despite the functional diversity of vaccine-induced immune responses across additional RTS,S/AS01 vaccine studies, the same antibody features, antibody-mediated phagocytosis and engagement of Fc gamma receptor 3A (FCGR3A), were able to predict protection across two additional human challenge studies. Functional validation using monoclonal antibodies confirmed the protective role of Fc-mediated antibody functions in restricting parasite infection both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that these correlates may mechanistically contribute to parasite restriction and can be used to guide the rational design of an improved vaccine against malaria.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32718991 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abb4757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956