Abstract

Efforts to develop vaccines against malaria represent a major research target. The observations that 1) sterile protection can be obtained when the host is exposed to live parasites and 2) the immunity against blood stage parasite is principally mediated by protective antibodies suggest that a protective vaccine is feasible. However, only a small number of proteins have been investigated so far and most of the Plasmodium proteome has yet to be explored. To date, only few immunodominant antigens have emerged for testing in clinical trials but no formulation has led to substantial protection in humans. The nature of parasite molecules associated with protection remains elusive. Here, immunomic screening of mice immune sera with different protection efficiencies against the whole parasite proteome allowed us to identify a large repertoire of antigens validated by screening a library expressing antigens. The calculation of weighted scores reflecting the likelihood of protection of each antigen using five predictive criteria derived from immunomic and proteomic data sets, highlighted a priority list of protective antigens. Altogether, the approach sheds light on conserved antigens across Plasmodium that are amenable to targeting by the host immune system upon merozoite invasion and blood stage development. Most of these antigens have preliminary protection data but have not been widely considered as candidate for vaccine trials, opening new perspectives that overcome the limited choice of immunodominant, poorly protective vaccines currently being the focus of malaria vaccine researches.

Highlights

  • Efforts to develop vaccines against malaria represent a major research target

  • The observations that 1) sterile protection can be obtained when the host is exposed to live parasites and 2) the immunity against blood stage parasite is principally mediated by protective antibodies suggest that a protective vaccine is feasible

  • The second group, named “Attenuated” sera and characterized by a moderate exposure time were obtained from mice infected with a high dose of parasite transfected with a plasmid containing a drug selection cassette and subsequently treated with pyrimethamine to select for the transfected parasites

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Summary

Graphical Abstract

Immunomic screening of mice immune sera with different protection efficiencies against the whole P. yoelii 17X parasite proteome was performed to identify the repertoire of antigens recognized by those sera. Immunomic screening of mice immune sera with different protection efficiencies against the whole parasite proteome allowed us to identify a large repertoire of antigens validated by screening a library expressing antigens. The approach sheds light on conserved antigens across Plasmodium that are amenable to targeting by the host immune system upon merozoite invasion and blood stage development Most of these antigens have preliminary protection data but have not been widely considered as candidate for vaccine trials, opening new perspectives that overcome the limited choice of immunodominant, poorly protective vaccines currently being the focus of malaria vaccine researches. Immunoprecipitation (IP) coupled to MALDI-TOF analysis was used to expand the size of the proteome screened Such an approach was used to identify parasite antigens recognized by mice immune sera from an internal parasite lysate [31]. The data generated here can serve as a valuable resource to develop a rational approach for the development of a malaria blood stage vaccine

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
None-Protective
DISCUSSION
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