Intramuscular immunization with a naked DNA plasmid expressing the Plasmodium yoelii circumsporozoite protein (pPyCSP) protects mice against challenge with P. yoelii sporozoites. This protection can be improved either by coadministration of a plasmid expressing murine GM-CSF (pGMCSF) or by boosting with recombinant poxvirus expressing the PyCSP. We now report that combining these two strategies, by first mixing the priming dose of pPyCSP with pGMCSF and then boosting with recombinant virus, can substantially increase vaccine effectiveness. Not only were immune responses and protection improved but the pPyCSP dose could be lowered from 100 μg to 1 μg with little loss of immunogenicity after boost with recombinant poxvirus. Comparing mice primed by the 1-μg doses of pPyCSP plus 1 μg pGMCSF with mice primed by 1-μg doses of pPyCSP alone, the former were better protected (60% vs 0) and had higher concentrations of Abs (titers of 163, 840 vs 5, 120 by indirect fluorescent Ab test against sporozoites), more ex vivo CTL activity (25% vs 7% specific lysis), and more IFN-γ-secreting cells by enzyme-linked immunospot assay (1460 vs 280 IFN-γ spot-forming cells/106 cells). Priming with plasmid vaccine plus pGMCSF and boosting with recombinant poxviruses strongly improves the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of DNA vaccination and allows for significant reduction of dose.
Molecules and cellular mechanisms that regulate the process of cell division in malaria parasites remain poorly understood. In this study we isolate and characterize the four Plasmodium falciparum centrins (PfCENs) and, by growth complementation studies, provide evidence for their involvement in cell division. Centrins are cytoskeleton proteins with key roles in cell division, including centrosome duplication, and possess four Ca 2؉ -binding EF hand domains. By means of phylogenetic analysis, we were able to decipher the evolutionary history of centrins in eukaryotes with particular emphasis on the situation in apicomplexans and other alveolates. Plasmodium possesses orthologs of four distinct centrin paralogs traceable to the ancestral alveolate, including two that are unique to alveolates. By real time PCR and/or immunofluorescence, we determined the expression of PfCEN mRNA or protein in sporozoites, asexual blood forms, gametocytes, and in the oocysts developing inside mosquito mid-gut. Immunoelectron microscopy studies showed that centrin is expressed in close proximity with the nucleus of sporozoites and asexual schizonts. Furthermore, confocal and widefield microscopy using the double staining with ␣-tubulin and centrin antibodies strongly suggested that centrin is associated with the parasite centrosome. Following the episomal expression of the four PfCENs in a centrin knock-out Leishmania donovani parasite line that exhibited a severe growth defect, one of the PfCENs was able to partially restore Leishmania growth rate and overcome the defect in cytokinesis in such mutant cell line. To our knowledge, this study is the first characterization of a Plasmodium molecule that is involved in the process of cell division. These results provide the opportunity to further explore the role of centrins in cell division in malaria parasites and suggest novel targets to construct genetically modified, live attenuated malaria vaccines.
A successful vaccine against Plasmodium vivax malaria would significantly improve the health and quality of the lives of more than 1 billion people around the world. A subunit vaccine is the only option in the absence of long-term culture of P. vivax parasites. The circumsporozoite protein that covers the surface of Plasmodium sporozoites is one of the best-studied malarial antigens and the most promising vaccine in clinical trials. We report here the development of a novel "immunologically optimal" recombinant vaccine expressed in Escherichia coli that encodes a chimeric CS protein encompassing repeats from the two major alleles, VK210 and VK247. This molecule is widely recognized by sera from patients naturally exposed to P. vivax infection and induces a highly potent immune response in genetically disparate strains of mice. Antibodies from immunized animals recognize both VK210 and VK247 sporozoites. Furthermore, these antibodies appear to be protective in nature since they cause the agglutination of live sporozoites, an in vitro surrogate of sporozoite infectivity. These results strongly suggest that recombinant CS is biologically active and highly immunogenic across major histocompatibility complex strains and raises the prospect that in humans this vaccine may induce protective immune responses.Outside of sub-Saharan Africa, Plasmodium vivax is the most prevalent of all human malarias. In addition to being present in tropical and subtropical regions, the ability of the parasite to complete its mosquito cycle at temperatures as low as 15°C has also allowed it to be spread in temperate climates. A unique feature of P. vivax is that some strains are capable of causing delayed infection by remaining latent for several months in the liver before emerging into the circulation to manifest clinical symptoms. Such individuals have been known to maintain transmission of malaria in areas where it is no longer naturally transmitted (41). Although P. vivax is usually not fatal, it is responsible for ca. 50% of all malaria cases worldwide (20). The large number of clinical cases and the severe morbidity this type of malaria causes contributes to a serious economic impact in developing countries. Recently, reports of severe forms of malaria caused by P. vivax infection have begun to appear (42). However, due to the fact that the disease caused by P. vivax is less lethal than P. falciparum, investments made to develop a vaccine against this parasite are lagging far behind. There is a need for concerted efforts toward developing vaccines to control the global transmission of P. vivax infections.Malaria parasites, while developing within hepatocytes, do not cause clinical illness and therefore are ideal targets for designing vaccines to protect children and malaria-naive adults against infection. Immunization with irradiation-attenuated malaria sporozoites has long been shown to induce protection against experimental sporozoite challenge in animal models and in humans (13,25), and currently efforts are ongoing to develop go...
The pathogenesis of experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) is an immunologic process, mediated in part by Th1 CD4+ T cells. However, the role of the Th1 CD4+ T cell differentiation program on the ability to control parasitemia and susceptibility to ECM disease during blood stage malaria has never been assessed directly. Using the Plasmodium berghei ANKA murine model of ECM and mice deficient for the transcription factor T-bet (the master regulator of Th1 cells) on the susceptible C57BL/6 background, we demonstrate that although T-bet plays a role in the regulation of parasite burden, it also promotes the pathogenesis of ECM. T-bet−deficient (Tbx21−/−) mice had higher parasitemia than wild type controls did during the ECM phase of disease (17.7 ± 3.1% versus 10.9 ± 1.5%). In addition, although 100% (10/10) of wild type mice developed ECM by day 9 after infection, only 30% (3/10) of Tbx21−/− mice succumbed to disease during the cerebral phase of infection. Resistance to ECM in Tbx21−/− mice was associated with diminished numbers of IFN-γ–producing CD4+ T cells in the spleen and a lower accumulation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the brain. An augmented Th2 immune response characterized by enhanced production of activated GATA-3+ CD4+ T cells and elevated levels of the eotaxin, MCP-1, and G-CSF cytokines was observed in the absence of T-bet. Our results suggest that in virulent malarias, immune modulation or therapy resulting in an early shift toward a Th2 response may help to ameliorate the most severe consequences of malaria immunopathogenesis and the prospect of host survival.
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