Immunogenicity of a non-repetitive sequence of Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein in man and mice.

1988 
In the present work, the hypothesis that individuals naturally exposed to Plasmodium falciparum malaria infection in endemic areas produce antibodies directed against non-repetitive epitopes of the circumsporozoite protein was investigated. Using a synthetic peptide reproducing the non-repetitive group-conserved region I sequence, we have shown that specific anti-region I antibodies are detectable in sera from endemic countries. Of these sera, 87% also had antibodies against the immunodominant repetitive epitope (Asn-Ala-Asn-Pro, NANP) of P. falciparum. In order to study the immunogenicity of this non-repetitive epitope, a synthetic peptide consisting of both region I and three (NANP) repeats [RI-(NANP)3] was used to immunize inbred strains of mice. H-2b mice produced antibodies against both the repetitive and the non-repetitive epitope. These antibodies were specific for each epitope, recognized P. falciparum sporozoites in immunofluorescence, and inhibited sporozoite penetration into human liver cells in vitro. Non-H-2b mice were completely unresponsive. Lymph node cells from H-2b mice immunized with RI-(NANP)3 peptide proliferated in the presence of RI-(NANP)3 and of (NANP)4 peptide, but never in the presence of RI peptide alone. These findings demonstrate that in the configuration used (i) the non-repetitive epitope region I does not carry T-helper epitopes; (ii) the (NANP) repetitive epitope may act as a carrier for the immune response to region I in mice; and (iii) therefore, immune response to region I in man probably depends on the recognition of T-cell epitopes similar to those involved in the anti-NANP response: i.e. such a T epitope may be NANP itself in responding individuals or another, not yet recognized, sporozoite T-cell epitope.
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