Mosquito bites and stages specific antibody responses againstPlasmodium falciparumin southern Ghana

Autor: Sebastian Shine Kwapong, Kwame Kumi Asare, Kwadwo Asamoah Kusi, Faustina Pappoe, Nicaise Ndam, Rachida Tahar, Anne Poinsignon, Linda Eva Amoah
Rok vydání: 2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.11.03.514987
Popis: BackgroundThe human host elicits specific immune responses after exposure to various life stages of the malaria parasite as well as components of mosquito saliva injected into the host during a mosquito bite. This study describes differences in IgG responses against antigens derived from the sporozoite (PfCSP), asexual stage parasite (PfEBA175) and the gametocyte (Pfs230) in addition to anAnopheles gambiaesalivary gland antigen (gSG6-P1) in two communities in Ghana with similar blood stage malaria parasite prevalence.MethodologyThis study used archived plasma samples collected from an earlier cross-sectional study that enrolled volunteers aged from 6 months to 70 years from Simiw, peri-urban community (N=347) and Obom, rural community (N=291). An archived thick and thin blood smear for microscopy was used for the estimation ofPlasmodiumparasite density and species and DNA extraction from blood spots andP. falciparumconfirmation was performed using PCR. This study used the stored plasma samples to determine IgG antibody levels toPlasmodium falciparumandAnophelessalivary antigens using indirect ELISA.ResultsIndividuals from Simiw had significantly higher levels of IgG against mosquito gSG6-P1 (median (95%CI)) (2.590 (2.452-2.783) ng/mL) compared to those from Obom (2.119 (1.957-2.345) ng/mL), p0.05).ConclusionIn conclusion, malaria transmission dynamics is highly complex. The similar malaria transmission intensity identified in the two communities resulted from a different combination of vector, environmental and host factors. With one community likely having a higher prevalence of uninfected mosquitoes and the other a larger reservoir of gametocyte carriers.
Databáze: OpenAIRE