4.8 Article

Heterotypic interactions drive antibody synergy against a malaria vaccine candidate

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28601-4

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资金

  1. Rhodes scholarship
  2. Wellcome Trust Infection, Immunology and Translational Medicine D. Phil programme
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Doctoral Foreign Study Award [FRN:157835]
  4. Wellcome Trust [220797/Z/20/Z, 106917/Z/15/Z]
  5. European Union [INFRA-2012-312661, 312661, 733273]
  6. Infectious Disease Division, Bureau for Global Health, US Agency for International Development [GH-BAA-2018-Addendum03]
  7. Wellcome Trust [220797/Z/20/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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This study identifies three antibodies that have synergistic effects on a malaria vaccine candidate and demonstrates that lateral interactions between the antibodies slow dissociation and inhibit parasite growth. Understanding the mechanisms of antibody synergy is crucial for vaccine design and antibody cocktail development.
Antibodies can have synergistic effects, but mechanisms are not well understood. Here, Ragotte et al. identify three antibodies that bind neighbouring epitopes on CyRPA, a malaria vaccine candidate, and show that lateral interactions between the antibodies slow dissociation and inhibit parasite growth synergistically. Understanding mechanisms of antibody synergy is important for vaccine design and antibody cocktail development. Examples of synergy between antibodies are well-documented, but the mechanisms underlying these relationships often remain poorly understood. The leading blood-stage malaria vaccine candidate, CyRPA, is essential for invasion of Plasmodium falciparum into human erythrocytes. Here we present a panel of anti-CyRPA monoclonal antibodies that strongly inhibit parasite growth in in vitro assays. Structural studies show that growth-inhibitory antibodies bind epitopes on a single face of CyRPA. We also show that pairs of non-competing inhibitory antibodies have strongly synergistic growth-inhibitory activity. These antibodies bind to neighbouring epitopes on CyRPA and form lateral, heterotypic interactions which slow antibody dissociation. We predict that such heterotypic interactions will be a feature of many immune responses. Immunogens which elicit such synergistic antibody mixtures could increase the potency of vaccine-elicited responses to provide robust and long-lived immunity against challenging disease targets.

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