4.4 Article

Specificity of the IgG antibody response to Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium malariae, and Plasmodium ovale MSP1(19) subunit proteins in multiplexed serologic assays

期刊

MALARIA JOURNAL
卷 17, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2566-0

关键词

Serology; Malaria; MSP1(19); Multiplex; Specificity

资金

  1. US President's Malaria Initiative

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BackgroundMultiplex bead assays (MBA) that measure IgG antibodies to the carboxy-terminal 19-kDa sub-unit of the merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1(19)) are currently used to determine malaria seroprevalence in human populations living in areas with both stable and unstable transmission. However, the species specificities of the IgG antibody responses to the malaria MSP1(19) antigens have not been extensively characterized using MBA.MethodsRecombinant Plasmodium falciparum (3D7), Plasmodium malariae (China I), Plasmodium ovale (Nigeria I), and Plasmodium vivax (Belem) MSP1(19) proteins were covalently coupled to beads for MBA. Threshold cut-off values for the assays were estimated using sera from US citizens with no history of foreign travel and by receiver operator characteristic curve analysis using diagnostic samples. Banked sera from experimentally infected chimpanzees, sera from humans from low transmission regions of Haiti and Cambodia (N=12), and elutions from blood spots from humans selected from a high transmission region of Mozambique (N=20) were used to develop an antigen competition MBA for antibody cross-reactivity studies. A sub-set of samples was further characterized using antibody capture/elution MBA, IgG subclass determination, and antibody avidity measurement.ResultsTotal IgG antibody responses in experimentally infected chimpanzees were species specific and could be completely suppressed by homologous competitor protein at a concentration of 10g/ml. Eleven of 12 samples from the low transmission regions and 12 of 20 samples from the high transmission area had antibody responses that were completely species specific. For 7 additional samples, the P. falciparum MSP1(19) responses were species specific, but various levels of incomplete heterologous competition were observed for the non-P. falciparum assays. A pan-malaria MSP1(19) cross-reactive antibody response was observed in elutions of blood spots from two 20-30years old Mozambique donors. The antibody response from one of these two donors had low avidity and skewed almost entirely to the IgG(3) subclass.ConclusionsEven when P. falciparum, P. malariae, P. ovale, and P. vivax are co-endemic in a high transmission setting, most antibody responses to MSP1(19) antigens are species-specific and are likely indicative of previous infection history. True pan-malaria cross-reactive responses were found to occur rarely.

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