4.5 Article

Malaria vaccine candidate: Design of a multivalent subunit α-helical coiled coil poly-epitope

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 29, Issue 40, Pages 7090-7099

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2011.06.122

Keywords

Malaria; Vaccine; Long synthetic peptide; Antibodies

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [310000-112244]
  2. Swiss Secretary for Education and Research [0536]
  3. Commission of the European Communities [LSHP-CT-2003-503240]
  4. NIBIB, NIH
  5. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation [42387]

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A new strategy for the rapid identification of new malaria antigens based on protein structural motifs was previously described. We identified and evaluated the malaria vaccine potential of fragments of several malaria antigens containing alpha-helical coiled coil protein motifs. By taking advantage of the relatively short size of these structural fragments, we constructed different poly-epitopes in which 3 or 4 of these segments were joined together via a non-immunogenic linker. Only peptides that are targets of human antibodies with anti-parasite in vitro biological activities were incorporated. One of the constructs, P181, was well recognized by sera and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of adults living in malaria-endemic areas. Affinity purified antigen-specific human antibodies and sera from P181-immunized mice recognised native proteins on malaria-infected erythrocytes in both immunofluorescence and western blot assays. In addition, specific antibodies inhibited parasite development in an antibody dependent cellular inhibition (ADCI) assay. Naturally induced antigen-specific human antibodies were at high titers and associated with clinical protection from malaria in longitudinal follow-up studies in Senegal. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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