Synergistic malaria vaccine combinations identified by systematic antigen screening

LY Bustamante, GT Powell, YC Lin… - Proceedings of the …, 2017 - National Acad Sciences
LY Bustamante, GT Powell, YC Lin, MD Macklin, N Cross, A Kemp, P Cawkill, T Sanderson
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2017National Acad Sciences
A highly effective vaccine would be a valuable weapon in the drive toward malaria
elimination. No such vaccine currently exists, and only a handful of the hundreds of potential
candidates in the parasite genome have been evaluated. In this study, we systematically
evaluated 29 antigens likely to be involved in erythrocyte invasion, an essential
developmental stage during which the malaria parasite is vulnerable to antibody-mediated
inhibition. Testing antigens alone and in combination identified several strain-transcending …
A highly effective vaccine would be a valuable weapon in the drive toward malaria elimination. No such vaccine currently exists, and only a handful of the hundreds of potential candidates in the parasite genome have been evaluated. In this study, we systematically evaluated 29 antigens likely to be involved in erythrocyte invasion, an essential developmental stage during which the malaria parasite is vulnerable to antibody-mediated inhibition. Testing antigens alone and in combination identified several strain-transcending targets that had synergistic combinatorial effects in vitro, while studies in an endemic population revealed that combinations of the same antigens were associated with protection from febrile malaria. Video microscopy established that the most effective combinations targeted multiple discrete stages of invasion, suggesting a mechanistic explanation for synergy. Overall, this study both identifies specific antigen combinations for high-priority clinical testing and establishes a generalizable approach that is more likely to produce effective vaccines.
National Acad Sciences