Cellular and humoral immune responses to well-defined blood stage antigens (major merozoite surface antigen) of Plasmodium falciparum in adults from an Indian zone where malaria is endemic.
1994
Conserved and variant regions of two blood stage vaccine candidate antigens of Plasmodium falciparum, merozoite surface antigen (MSA-1) and ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigen (Pf155/RESA), have been shown to be immunogenic. However, the relative immunogenicity of these immunogens in different populations has not been studied. The conserved N-terminal region of MSA-1 was investigated for its immunogenicity by studying cellular (T cell) and humoral (B cell) immune responses in P. falciparum-primed individuals, living in malaria-hyperendemic areas (Orissa State, India), where malaria presents an alarming situation. MSA-1-derived synthetic peptides contained sequences that activated T cells to proliferate and release gamma interferon in vitro. There was considerable variation in the responses to different peptides. However, the highest responses (51% [18 of 35] by proliferation and 34% [12 of 35] by gamma interferon release) were obtained with a synthetic hybrid peptide containing sequences from conserved N- and C-terminal repeat regions of MSA-1 and Pf155/RESA, respectively. Antibody reactivities in an enzyme immunoassay of plasma samples from these donors to different peptides used for T-cell activation were heterogeneous. In general, there was poor correlation between DNA synthesis and either gamma interferon release or antibody responses in individual donors, underlining the importance of examining several parameters of T-cell activation to assess the total T-cell responsiveness of a study population to a given antigen. However, the results from our studies suggest that synthetic constructs containing sequences from the N- and C-terminal regions of MSA-1 and Pf155/RESA representing different erythrocytic stages of the P. falciparum parasite are more immunogenic in humans living in malaria-hyperendemic areas of India who have been primed by natural infection.
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