Abstract

BackgroundAs malaria incidence and transmission in a region decreases, it becomes increasingly difficult to identify areas of active transmission. Improved methods for identifying and monitoring foci of active malaria transmission are needed in areas of low parasite prevalence in order to achieve malaria elimination. Serological assays can provide population-level infection history to inform elimination campaigns.MethodsA bead-based multiplex antibody detection assay was used to evaluate a chimeric Plasmodium vivax MSP1 protein (PvRMC-MSP1), designed to be broadly immunogenic for use in vaccine studies, to act as a pan-malaria serological tool based on its ability to capture IgG in plasma samples obtained from naturally exposed individuals. Samples from 236 US travellers with PCR confirmed infection status from all four major Plasmodium species infecting humans, Plasmodium falciparum (n = 181), Plasmodium vivax (n = 38), Plasmodium malariae (n = 4), and Plasmodium ovale (n = 13) were tested for IgG capture using PvRMC-MSP1 as well as the four recombinant MSP1-19 kD isoforms representative of these Plasmodium species.ResultsRegardless of infecting Plasmodium species, a large proportion of plasma samples from infected US travellers provided a high assay signal to the PvRMC-MSP1 chimeric protein, with 115 high responders out of 236 samples assessed (48.7%). When grouped by active infection, 38.7% P. falciparum-, 92.1% of P. vivax-, 75.0% P. malariae-, and 53.4% of P. ovale-infected individuals displayed high assay signals in response to PvRMC-MSP1. It was also determined that plasma from P. vivax-infected individuals produced increased assay signals in response to the PvRMC-MSP1 chimera as compared to the recombinant PvMSP1 for 89.5% (34 out of 38) of individuals. PvRMC-MSP1 also showed improved ability to capture IgG antibodies from P. falciparum-infected individuals when compared to the capture by recombinant PvMSP1, with high assay signals observed for 38.7% of P. falciparum-infected travellers in response to PvRMC-MSP1 IgG capture compared to just 1.1% who were high responders to capture by the recombinant PvMSP1 protein.ConclusionsThese results support further study of designed antigens as an approach for increasing sensitivity or broadening binding capacity to improve existing serological tools for determining population-level exposure to Plasmodium species. Including both broad-reacting and Plasmodium species-specific antigen-coated beads in an assay panel could provide a nuanced view of population-level exposure histories, an extensive IgG profile, and detailed seroestimates. A more sensitive serological tool for detection of P. vivax exposure would aid malaria elimination campaigns in co-endemic areas and regions where P. vivax is the dominant parasite.

Highlights

  • As malaria incidence and transmission in a region decreases, it becomes increasingly difficult to identify areas of active transmission

  • This study aims to assess the ability of a novel chimeric antigen based on P. vivax Merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1) to serve as a pan-malaria surveillance tool that can act as a marker for exposure to any Plasmodium species infecting humans

  • All five promiscuous T cell epitopes included in PvRMC-MSP1 were derived from P. vivax Belem and selected for their ability to be broadly recognized by individuals with diverse Human leukocyte antigens (HLA) haplotypes

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Summary

Introduction

As malaria incidence and transmission in a region decreases, it becomes increasingly difficult to identify areas of active transmission. Improved methods for identifying and monitoring foci of active malaria transmission are needed in areas of low parasite prevalence in order to achieve malaria elimination. Improved methods for identifying and monitoring foci of active malaria transmission are needed in these areas of low parasite prevalence. Entomological inoculation rates (EIR), which measure the mean number of infectious mosquito bites per individual over time, remain a widely-accepted measure of transmission, but lack precision due to heterogeneous mosquito distributions [10]. This method is not without practical and ethical considerations, as it requires mosquito trapping using adult volunteers. Human populations in many other parts of the world are subjected to the burden of multiple Plasmodium species, complicating epidemiological studies and elimination interventions as indicators only exist for the predominant parasite species [8, 15, 16]

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