Abstract

BackgroundWhole Plasmodium sporozoites serve as both experimental tools and potentially as deployable vaccines in the fight against malaria infection. Live sporozoites infect hepatocytes and induce a diverse repertoire of CD8+ T cell responses, some of which are capable of killing Plasmodium-infected hepatocytes. Previous studies in Plasmodium yoelii-immunized BALB/c mice showed that some CD8+ T cell responses expanded with repeated parasite exposure, whereas other responses did not.ResultsHere, similar outcomes were observed using known Plasmodium berghei epitopes in C57BL/6 mice. With the exception of the response to PbTRAP, IFNγ-producing T cell responses to most studied antigens, such as PbGAP50, failed to re-expand in mice immunized with two doses of irradiated P. berghei sporozoites. In an effort to boost secondary CD8+ T cell responses, heterologous cross-species immunizations were performed. Alignment of P. yoelii 17XNL and P. berghei ANKA proteins revealed that >60 % of the amino acids in syntenic orthologous proteins are continuously homologous in fragments ≥8-amino acids long, suggesting that cross-species immunization could potentially trigger responses to a large number of common Class I epitopes. Heterologous immunization resulted in a larger liver burden than homologous immunization. Amongst seven tested antigen-specific responses, only CSP- and TRAP-specific CD8+ T cell responses were expanded by secondary homologous sporozoite immunization and only those to the L3 ribosomal protein and S20 could be re-expanded by heterologous immunization. In general, heterologous late-arresting, genetically attenuated sporozoites were better at secondarily expanding L3-specific responses than were irradiated sporozoites. GAP50 and several other antigens shared between P. berghei and P. yoelii induced a large number of IFNγ-positive T cells during primary immunization, yet these responses could not be re-expanded by either homologous or heterologous secondary immunization.ConclusionsThese studies highlight how responses to different sporozoite antigens can markedly differ in recall following repeated sporozoite vaccinations. Cross-species immunization broadens the secondary response to sporozoites and may represent a novel strategy for candidate antigen discovery.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12936-016-1295-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Whole Plasmodium sporozoites serve as both experimental tools and potentially as deployable vaccines in the fight against malaria infection

  • Sporozoite formulations include radiation-attenuated sporozoites (RAS) [3, 6], genetically attenuated parasites (GAP) [7] or wild-type (WT) sporozoites administered under anti-malarial drug prophylaxis [2, 8]

  • Sporozoite vaccination and challenge WT Plasmodium yoelii 17XNL, WT P. berghei ANKA and P. yoelii fabb/f−/− (GAP) sporozoites were obtained by salivary gland dissection from Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes reared at the Research Insectary at the Center for Infectious Disease Research

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Whole Plasmodium sporozoites serve as both experimental tools and potentially as deployable vaccines in the fight against malaria infection. Sporozoite formulations include radiation-attenuated sporozoites (RAS) [3, 6], genetically attenuated parasites (GAP) [7] or wild-type (WT) sporozoites administered under anti-malarial drug prophylaxis [2, 8]. Such approaches induce protective antibodies and T cells with IFNγ-producing cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL), which are important for protection during the liver stage [9]. Billman et al Malar J (2016) 15:238 that express thousands of different proteins throughout their lifecycle [10] Until recently, this enormous array of proteins made it difficult to study antigen-specific immune responses on a large scale. Relatively little is known about the repertoire of T cell responses and to some extent antibody responses that target pre-erythrocytic stage antigens

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call