Abstract

BackgroundEffective malaria transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs) can support malaria eradication programmes, and the standard membrane-feeding assay (SMFA) has been used as a “gold standard” assay for TBV development. However, in SMFA, the inhibitory activity is commonly measured at oocyst stage of parasites, while it is the sporozoites which transmit malaria from a mosquito to a human. A handful of studies have shown that there is a positive correlation between oocyst and sporozoite intensities. However, no study has been completed to compare inhibition levels in oocyst and sporozoite intensities in the presence of transmission-blocking (TB) antibodies.ResultsPlasmodium falciparum NF54 gametocytes were fed to Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes with or without anti-Pfs25 or anti-Pfs48/45 TB antibodies in 15 independent assays. For each group, a portion of the mosquitoes was dissected for oocyst counts (day 8 after feed), and a portion of the remaining mosquitoes was dissected for sporozoite counts (day 16). This study covered a large range of oocyst and sporozoite intensities: 0.2 to 80.5 on average for oocysts, and 141 to 77,417 for sporozoites. The sporozoite data were well explained by a zero-inflated negative binomial model, regardless of the presence or absence of TB antibodies. Inhibition levels in both oocyst and sporozoite intensities were determined within the same groups in 9 independent assays. When the level of inhibition in sporozoite number (expressed as Log Mean Ratio, LMR; average number in a control group was divided by the one in a test group, then took a log of the ratio) was plotted against LMR in oocyst number, the best-fit slope of a linear regression was not different from 1 (the best estimate, 1.08; 95% confidence interval, 0.87 to 1.29). Furthermore, a Bland–Altman analysis showed a strong agreement between inhibitions in oocysts and in sporozoites.ConclusionsThe results indicate that percent inhibition in oocyst intensity of a test sample can be directly converted to % inhibition in sporozoite intensity in P. falciparum SMFA. Therefore, if sporozoite intensity determines transmission rate from mosquitoes to humans, the percent inhibition in oocyst intensity measured by SMFA can be used to estimate the TBV efficacy.

Highlights

  • Effective malaria transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs) can support malaria eradication programmes, and the standard membrane-feeding assay (SMFA) has been used as a “gold standard” assay for TBV development

  • When the intercept term was excluded, the best estimate of slope was 966, meaning that one oocyst produced ~900–1000 salivary gland sporozoites, irrespective of whether the parasites were exposed to TB antibody or not before the oocyst formation

  • Similar to the oocyst data reported previously [11], the error range for the sporozoite data was bigger at lower inhibition levels in a %% transmission reducing activity (TRA)-scale (Fig. 3a)

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Summary

Introduction

Effective malaria transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs) can support malaria eradication programmes, and the standard membrane-feeding assay (SMFA) has been used as a “gold standard” assay for TBV development. In SMFA, the inhibitory activity is commonly measured at oocyst stage of parasites, while it is the sporozoites which transmit malaria from a mosquito to a human. Due to the expanded application of anti-malarial control measures, such as insecticide-treated nets, rapid diagnosis, and antimalarial drugs, the mortality of malaria has been reduced significantly in the last 15–20 years. Despite this great progress, there were still 445,000 estimated malaria related deaths in 2016, mostly due to Plasmodium falciparum [1]. Transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs) are designed to induce antibodies in human hosts against sexual stage malaria antigens or to antigens found in the mosquito vector [2]. Each oocyst can produce many sporozoites, and eventually some of the sporozoites which move to salivary glands are injected into the human hosts

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