Abstract

A specific DNA probe has been used to quantify the neutralizing effects of monoclonal antibodies (3D11) against the circumsporozoite protein of Plasmodium berghei sporozoites. The amount of parasite DNA was measured in the livers of Norway Brown rats at the peak of proliferation of the exoerythrocytic forms (EEF). In vitro treatment of 1.5 X 10(5) sporozoites with 0.36 microgram/0.5 ml of whole 3D11 IgG neutralized about 90% of the sporozoite infectivity. When the dose was 3.6 micrograms no signal was detected, indicating that less than ten sporozoites developed into EEF in the liver. In contrast, 3.6 micrograms of Fab obtained from 3D11 neutralized sporozoite infectivity by only 60%. Although the neutralizing effect of 3D11 was very marked, the infected rats developed parasitemias after a prolonged delay in patency, suggesting that a small proportion of sporozoites was resistant to the effects of 3D11. The sporozoites were subjected to four cycles of 3D11-mediated selection, each one involving treatment of sporozoites with the antibodies, injection of the mixture into rats, infection of hamsters with blood stage parasites obtained from the rats, feeding of Anopheles stephensi on these hamsters, and obtaining sporozoites from the salivary glands of the infected mosquitoes. After four cycles of selection, the susceptibility of the resulting sporozoites to different concentrations of 3D11 was compared with that of nonselected sporozoites. No differences were detected, indicating that the capacity of a few sporozoites to escape the neutralizing effect of 3D11 antibodies is not inherited.

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