학술논문

Ex vivo tetramer staining and cell surface phenotyping for early activation markers CD38 and HLA-DR to enumerate and characterize malaria antigen-specific CD8+ T-cells induced in human volunteers immunized with a Plasmodium falciparum adenovirus-vectored malaria vaccine expressing AMA1
Document Type
Article
Source
Malaria Journal. 2013, Vol. 12 Issue 1, p1-20. 20p.
Subject
*MALARIA diagnosis
*CD81 antigen
*HLA-DR antigens
*T cell receptors
*TETRAMERS (Oligomers)
*PROTEIN analysis
Language
ISSN
1475-2875
Abstract
Background Malaria is responsible for up to a 600,000 deaths per year; conveying an urgent need for the development of a malaria vaccine. Studies with whole sporozoite vaccines in mice and nonhuman primates have shown that sporozoite-induced CD8+ T cells targeting liver stage antigens can mediate sterile protection. There is a need for a direct method to identify and phenotype malaria vaccine-induced CD8+ T cells in humans. Methods Fluorochrome-labelled tetramers consisting of appropriate MHC class I molecules in complex with predicted binding peptides derived from Plasmodium falciparum AMA-1 were used to label ex vivo AMA-1 epitope specific CD8+ T cells from research subjects responding strongly to immunization with the NMRC-M3V-Ad-PfCA (adenovirus-vectored) malaria vaccine. The identification of these CD8+ T cells on the basis of their expression of early activation markers was also investigated. Results Analyses by flow cytometry demonstrated that two of the six tetramers tested: TLDEMRHFY: HLA-A"01:01 and NEVVVKEEY: HLA-B"18:01, labelled tetramerspecific CD8+ T cells from two HLA-A"01:01 volunteers and one HLA-B"18:01 volunteer, respectively. By contrast, post-immune CD8+ T cells from all six of the immunized volunteers exhibited enhanced expression of the CD38 and HLA-DRhi early activation markers. For the three volunteers with positive tetramer staining, the early activation phenotype positive cells included essentially all of the tetramer positive, malaria epitopespecific CD8+ T cells suggesting that the early activation phenotype could identify all malaria vaccine-induced CD8+ T cells without prior knowledge of their exact epitope specificity Conclusions The results demonstrated that class I tetramers can identify ex vivo malaria vaccine antigenspecific CD8+ T cells and could therefore be used to determine their frequency, cell surface phenotype and transcription factor usage. The results also demonstrated that vaccine antigenspecific CD8+ T cells could be identified by activation markers without prior knowledge of their antigen-specificity, using a subunit vaccine for proof-of-concept. Whether, whole parasite or adjuvanted protein vaccines will also induce {CD38 and HLA-DRhi}+ CD8+ T cells populations reflective of the antigen-specific response will the subject of future investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]