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Measurement of ex vivo ELISpot interferon-gamma recall responses to Plasmodium falciparum AMA1 and CSP in Ghanaian adults with natural exposure to malaria

  • Harini Ganeshan
  • , Kwadwo A. Kusi
  • , Dorothy Anum
  • , Michael R. Hollingdale
  • , Bjoern Peters
  • , Yohan Kim
  • , John K.A. Tetteh
  • , Michael F. Ofori
  • , Ben A. Gyan
  • , Kwadwo A. Koram
  • , Jun Huang
  • , Maria Belmonte
  • , Jo Glenna Banania
  • , Daniel Dodoo
  • , Eileen Villasante
  • , Martha Sedegah
  • Naval Medical Research Center
  • University of Ghana
  • San Diego

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Malaria eradication requires a concerted approach involving all available control tools, and an effective vaccine would complement these efforts. An effective malaria vaccine should be able to induce protective immune responses in a genetically diverse population. Identification of immunodominant T cell epitopes will assist in determining if candidate vaccines will be immunogenic in malaria-endemic areas. This study therefore investigated whether class I-restricted T cell epitopes of two leading malaria vaccine antigens, Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein (CSP) and apical membrane antigen-1 (AMA1), could recall T cell interferon-γ responses from naturally exposed subjects using ex vivo ELISpot assays. Methods: Thirty-five subjects aged between 24 and 43 years were recruited from a malaria-endemic urban community of Ghana in 2011, and their peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were tested in ELISpot IFN-γ assays against overlapping 15mer peptide pools spanning the entire CSP and AMA1 antigens, and 9-10mer peptide epitope mixtures that included previously identified and/or predicted human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class 1-restricted epitopes from same two antigens. Results: For CSP, 26 % of subjects responded to at least one of the nine 15mer peptide pools whilst 17 % responded to at least one of the five 9-10mer HLA-restricted epitope mixtures. For AMA1, 63 % of subjects responded to at least one of the 12 AMA1 15mer peptide pools and 51 % responded to at least one of the six 9-10mer HLA-restricted epitope mixtures. Following analysis of data from the two sets of peptide pools, along with bioinformatics predictions of class I-restricted epitopes and the HLA supertypes expressed by a subset of study subjects, peptide pools that may contain epitopes recognized by multiple HLA supertypes were identified. Collectively, these results suggest that natural transmission elicits ELISpot IFN-γ activities to class 1-restricted epitopes that are largely HLA-promiscuous. Conclusions: These results generally demonstrate that CSP and AMA1 peptides recalled ELISpot IFN-γ responses from naturally exposed individuals and that both CSP and AMA1 contain diverse class 1-restricted epitopes that are HLA-promiscuous and are widely recognized in this population.

Original languageEnglish
Article number55
JournalMalaria Journal
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2016
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • AMA1
  • Apical membrane antigen-1
  • CSP
  • Circumsporozoite protein
  • Class I-restricted epitope
  • Ex vivo ELISpot
  • Ghana
  • HLA
  • IFN-γ
  • Natural transmission
  • Peptide
  • T cells

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