Antibody responses to antigenic targets of recent exposure are associated with low-density parasitemia in controlled human Plasmodium falciparum infections

Autor: van Den Hoogen, L, Walk, J, Oulton, T, Reuling, I, Reiling, L, Beeson, J, Coppel, R, Singh, S, Draper, S, Bousema, T, Drakeley, C, Sauerwein, R, Tetteh, K
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: van den Hoogen, L L, Walk, J, Oulton, T, Reuling, I J, Reiling, L, Beeson, J G, Coppel, R L, Singh, S K, Draper, S J, Bousema, T, Drakeley, C, Sauerwein, R & Tetteh, K K A 2019, ' Antibody responses to antigenic targets of recent exposure are associated with low-density parasitemia in controlled human Plasmodium falciparum infections ', Frontiers in Microbiology, vol. 9, 3300 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.03300
ISSN: 1664-302X
Popis: The majority of malaria infections in low transmission settings remain undetectable by conventional diagnostics. A powerful model to identify antibody responses that allow accurate detection of recent exposure to low-density infections is controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) studies in which healthy volunteers are infected with the Plasmodium parasite. We aimed to evaluate antibody responses in malaria-naïve volunteers exposed to a single CHMI using a custom-made protein microarray. All participants developed a blood-stage infection with peak parasite densities up to 100 parasites/μl in the majority of participants (50/54), while the remaining four participants had peak densities between 100 and 200 parasites/μl. There was a strong correlation between parasite density and antibody responses associated with the most reactive blood-stage targets 1 month after CHMI (Etramp 5, GLURP-R2, MSP4 and MSP1-19; Spearman’s ρ = 0.82, p < 0.001). Most volunteers developed antibodies against a potential marker of recent exposure: Etramp 5 (37/45, 82%). Our findings justify validation in endemic populations to define a minimum set of antigens needed to detect exposure to natural low-density infections.
Databáze: OpenAIRE