| Literature DB >> 35260169 |
Ivo Mueller1,2, Rhea J Longley3,4, Zoe Shih-Jung Liu1,2,5, Jetsumon Sattabongkot6, Michael White7, Sadudee Chotirat6, Chalermpon Kumpitak6, Eizo Takashima8, Matthias Harbers9, Wai-Hong Tham1,2, Julie Healer1,2, Chetan E Chitnis10, Takafumi Tsuboi8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plasmodium vivax (P. vivax) is the dominant Plasmodium spp. causing the disease malaria in low-transmission regions outside of Africa. These regions often feature high proportions of asymptomatic patients with sub-microscopic parasitaemia and relapses. Naturally acquired antibody responses are induced after Plasmodium infection, providing partial protection against high parasitaemia and clinical episodes. However, previous work has failed to address the presence and maintenance of such antibody responses to P. vivax particularly in low-transmission regions.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35260169 PMCID: PMC8904165 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-022-02281-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 11.150
Demographic characteristics of the two study populations
| Cohort | Thai symptomatics ( | Thai asymptomatics ( |
|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | Symptomatic | Asymptomatic |
| Age (years)a | 29 (7–71) | 26.5 (4–72)b |
| Proportion male | 58.8% | 63.3% b |
| Self-reported past malaria exposure (yes/no) | 52.9% had past exposure | 56.7% had past exposure |
| Study duration | 9 months | 14 months |
| Time points with antibody measurements | 17 | 10–14 |
| Enrolment (w0) | Enrolment—6 months | |
| Recurrent infection | No | No |
| Treatment | Chloroquine (3 days) & Primaquine (14 days) | N/A |
| Parasite density at enrolment (copies/mL)a, c | 2.5 × 105 (2.85 × 104–6.84 × 106) | 1.03 × 102 (2.44 × 10−1–9.58 × 105) |
| N/A | 1 (1-4) |
aData are shown as median and range
bNo age or gender data available for four asymptomatic individuals
cIndicated by positive P. vivax-specific qPCR or PCR results
dData are shown as median and range
Fig. 1Overview of study design and antibody measurements for Thai symptomatic and asymptomatic longitudinal cohorts. The length of the bars represents the duration of the study. The Thai symptomatic patients were all recruited at the time of clinical P. vivax infection then followed for 9 months. The Thai asymptomatic individuals were selected from an existing yearlong observational cohort [32]. Individuals were selected who had an asymptomatic P. vivax infection within the first 6 months of the study as determined by PCR during surveillance. Total IgG antibody measurements were made at the time of P. vivax infection and then at all available following time points
Fig. 2Comparison of adjusted total IgG kinetic profiles between IgG-immunogenic and non-IgG-immunogenic P. vivax antigens in 34 Thai patients with symptomatic P. vivax infections. Antigen-specific IgG antibody responses were measured against 52 P. vivax antigens for 9 months following a symptomatic P. vivax infection among all patients from western Thailand. The antibody responses were converted to arbitrary relative antibody units (RAU) from median fluorescent intensity (MFI) and adjusted against the median negative control baseline by subtraction. Each line and colour represent one P. vivax antigen and its specific antibody kinetics following exposure. Negative control panels consist of malaria-free individuals from 3 sources: Australian Red Cross (n = 100), Thai Red Cross (n = 72) and Volunteer Blood Donor Registry (n = 102). Antigens with antibody responses 1 SD above the median negative control baseline at 1-week post-infection were classified as “IgG-immunogenic”. Dots show the median of the 34 patients for each protein, box plots show the median and range of all proteins combined
Fig. 3Adjusted IgG subclass kinetics in 34 Thai patients following symptomatic P. vivax infections. The levels of 4 IgG subclass responses against 26 total-IgG-immunogenic P. vivax antigens (PVX_123685 was excluded) were measured every 2–8 weeks for 9 months. Data were adjusted by subtracting the median of pooled negative control panels (n = 274). Each line and colour represent one P. vivax antigen and its specific antibody kinetics following exposure. Dots show the median of the 34 patients for each protein, box plots show the median and range of the population of protein
Fig. 4Comparison of adjusted total IgG and IgM against 15 P. vivax antigens following symptomatic infections. Fifteen antigens with IgM positivity at 1-week post-infection (> 2 SD above baseline median) were selected, and their IgM responses over a 9-month period were measured and compared to total IgG responses plotted on the same scale. Each line and colour represent an antibody class (either IgG or IgM) and its specific antibody kinetics following exposure. Data were adjusted by subtracting the median of pooled negative control panels (n = 274). Data are expressed as the median ± 95% CI
Fig. 5The association between presence of PEXEL motifs and estimated half-life of total IgG antibodies, and the presence of TMD and the estimated half-life of IgG1-producing long-lived ASCs in the Thai symptomatic population. The kinetics of total IgG antibody against 52 IgG-immunogenic P. vivax antigens were determined following symptomatic P. vivax infections in Thai individuals in the absence of recurrent infections for 9 months. Mathematical modelling was then used to generate the estimated half-life of total IgG and IgG1-producing long-lived ASCs. The presence of PEXEL and TMDs was predicted for each P. vivax antigen using the online servers: PlasmoDB (https://plasmodb.org/plasmo/app) and Transmembrane Helices Hidden Markov Model (TMHMM) Server version 2.0 (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/TMHMM/). Wilcoxon tests (non-parametric) were performed to compare between antigens with (Yes) and without (No) PEXEL or TMD. p value less than 0.05 was considered significant
Fig. 6Comparison of adjusted total IgG kinetics against 27 P. vivax antigens following symptomatic or asymptomatic P. vivax infections. The kinetics of total IgG antibody against 27 IgG-immunogenic P. vivax antigens were determined following both asymptomatic (for a year) and symptomatic (for 9 months) P. vivax infections in Thai individuals in the absence of recurrent infections. Antibody data after asymptomatic infection were aligned to the time of infection, and thus sample size diminishes at later time points. Each line and colour represent one P. vivax antigen and its specific antibody kinetics following exposure. Data were adjusted by subtracting the median of pooled negative control panels (n = 274). Dots show the median of the 34 patients for each protein; box plots show the median and range of the population of proteins