[HTML][HTML] Cross-stage immunity for malaria vaccine development

W Nahrendorf, A Scholzen, RW Sauerwein… - Vaccine, 2015 - Elsevier
W Nahrendorf, A Scholzen, RW Sauerwein, J Langhorne
Vaccine, 2015Elsevier
A vaccine against malaria is urgently needed for control and eventual eradication. Different
approaches are pursued to induce either sterile immunity directed against pre-erythrocytic
parasites or to mimic naturally acquired immunity by controlling blood-stage parasite
densities and disease severity. Pre-erythrocytic and blood-stage malaria vaccines are often
seen as opposing tactics, but it is likely that they have to be combined into a multi-stage
malaria vaccine to be optimally safe and effective. Since many antigenic targets are shared …
Abstract
A vaccine against malaria is urgently needed for control and eventual eradication. Different approaches are pursued to induce either sterile immunity directed against pre-erythrocytic parasites or to mimic naturally acquired immunity by controlling blood-stage parasite densities and disease severity. Pre-erythrocytic and blood-stage malaria vaccines are often seen as opposing tactics, but it is likely that they have to be combined into a multi-stage malaria vaccine to be optimally safe and effective.
Since many antigenic targets are shared between liver- and blood-stage parasites, malaria vaccines have the potential to elicit cross-stage protection with immune mechanisms against both stages complementing and enhancing each other. Here we discuss evidence from pre-erythrocytic and blood-stage subunit and whole parasite vaccination approaches that show that protection against malaria is not necessarily stage-specific. Parasites arresting at late liver-stages especially, can induce powerful blood-stage immunity, and similarly exposure to blood-stage parasites can afford pre-erythrocytic immunity.
The incorporation of a blood-stage component into a multi-stage malaria vaccine would hence not only combat breakthrough infections in the blood should the pre-erythrocytic component fail to induce sterile protection, but would also actively enhance the pre-erythrocytic potency of this vaccine. We therefore advocate that future studies should concentrate on the identification of cross-stage protective malaria antigens, which can empower multi-stage malaria vaccine development.
Elsevier