학술논문

Microarray analyses reveal strain-specific antibody responses to Plasmodium falciparum apical membrane antigen 1 variants following natural infection and vaccination
Document Type
article
Source
Scientific Reports. 10(1)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Prevention
Biotechnology
Malaria
Vector-Borne Diseases
Immunization
Infectious Diseases
Rare Diseases
HIV/AIDS
Vaccine Related
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
3.4 Vaccines
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Antibodies
Protozoan
Antibody Formation
Antigens
Protozoan
Malaria Vaccines
Malaria
Falciparum
Membrane Proteins
Plasmodium falciparum
Protozoan Proteins
Language
Abstract
Vaccines based on Plasmodium falciparum apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) have failed due to extensive polymorphism in AMA1. To assess the strain-specificity of antibody responses to malaria infection and AMA1 vaccination, we designed protein and peptide microarrays representing hundreds of unique AMA1 variants. Following clinical malaria episodes, children had short-lived, sequence-independent increases in average whole-protein seroreactivity, as well as strain-specific responses to peptides representing diverse epitopes. Vaccination resulted in dramatically increased seroreactivity to all 263 AMA1 whole-protein variants. High-density peptide analysis revealed that vaccinated children had increases in seroreactivity to four distinct epitopes that exceeded responses to natural infection. A single amino acid change was critical to seroreactivity to peptides in a region of AMA1 associated with strain-specific vaccine efficacy. Antibody measurements using whole antigens may be biased towards conserved, immunodominant epitopes. Peptide microarrays may help to identify immunogenic epitopes, define correlates of vaccine protection, and measure strain-specific vaccine-induced antibodies.