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https://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/68073
TRANSMISSION-REDUCING AND -ENHANCING MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES AGAINST PLASMODIUM VIVAX GAMETE SURFACE PROTEIN PVS48/45
Pvs48/45
Monoclonal antibodies
Transmission-reducing activity
Transmission-blocking vaccine
Transmission-enhancing activity
Anopheles darlingi
Author
Affilliation
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Fiocruz Rondônia. Laboratório de Entomologia. Plataforma de Produção e Infecção de Vetores da Malária. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Fiocruz Rondônia. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil / Fundação Universidade Federal de Rondônia. Programa de pós-graduação em Biologia Experimental. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Fiocruz Rondônia. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil / Fundação Universidade Federal de Rondônia. Programa de pós-graduação em Biologia Experimental. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
George Washington University. Department of Global Health. Washington, DC, USA.
Yale School of Medicine. New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA / George Washington University. Department of Global Health. Washington, DC, USA.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Fiocruz Rondônia. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil / Fundação Universidade Federal de Rondônia. Programa de pós-graduação em Biologia Experimental. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Fiocruz Rondônia. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil / Fundação Universidade Federal de Rondônia. Programa de pós-graduação em Biologia Experimental. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
George Washington University. Department of Global Health. Washington, DC, USA.
Yale School of Medicine. New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Tulane University. Department of Tropical Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA / George Washington University. Department of Global Health. Washington, DC, USA.
Abstract
Gamete surface protein P48/45 has been shown to be important for male gamete fertility and a strong candidate for the development of a malaria transmission-blocking vaccine (TBV). However, TBV development for Plasmodium vivax homolog Pvs48/45 has been slow because of a number of challenges: availability of conformationally suitable recombinant protein; the lack of an in vivo challenge model; and the inability to produce P. vivax gametocytes in culture to test transmission-blocking activity of antibodies. To support ongoing efforts to develop Pvs48/45 as a potential vaccine candidate, we initiated efforts to develop much needed reagents to move the fieldfieldforward. We generated monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against Pvs48/45 and characterized putative functional domains in Pvs48/45 using recombinant fragments corresponding to domains D1–D3 and their biological functionality through ex vivo direct membrane feeding assays (DMFAs) using P. vivax parasites from patients in a field setting in Brazil. While some mAbs partially blocked oocyst development in the DMFA, one mAb caused a significant enhancement of the infectivity of gametocytes in the mosquitoes. Individual mAbs exhibiting blocking and enhancing activities recognized non-overlapping epitopes in Pvs48/45. Further characterization of precise epitopes recognized by transmission-reducing and -enhancing antibodies will be crucial to design an effective immunogen with optimum transmission-reducing potential.
Keywords
Plasmodium vivaxPvs48/45
Monoclonal antibodies
Transmission-reducing activity
Transmission-blocking vaccine
Transmission-enhancing activity
Anopheles darlingi
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