Preerythrocytic, live-attenuated Plasmodium falciparum vaccine candidates by design
Open Access
- 4 August 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 106 (31), 13004-13009
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0906387106
Abstract
Falciparum malaria is initiated when Anopheles mosquitoes transmit the Plasmodium sporozoite stage during a blood meal. Irradiated sporozoites confer sterile protection against subsequent malaria infection in animal models and humans. This level of protection is unmatched by current recombinant malaria vaccines. However, the live-attenuated vaccine approach faces formidable obstacles, including development of accurate, reproducible attenuation techniques. We tested whether Plasmodium falciparum could be attenuated at the early liver stage by genetic engineering. The P. falciparum genetically attenuated parasites (GAPs) harbor individual deletions or simultaneous deletions of the sporozoite-expressed genes P52 and P36. Gene deletions were done by double-cross-over recombination to avoid genetic reversion of the knockout parasites. The gene deletions did not affect parasite replication throughout the erythrocytic cycle, gametocyte production, mosquito infections, and sporozoite production rates. However, the deletions caused parasite developmental arrest during hepatocyte infection. The double-gene deletion line exhibited a more severe intrahepatocytic growth defect compared with the single-gene deletion lines, and it did not persist. This defect was assessed in an in vitro liver-stage growth assay and in a chimeric mouse model harboring human hepatocytes. The strong phenotype of the double knockout GAP justifies its human testing as a whole-organism vaccine candidate using the established sporozoite challenge model. GAPs might provide a safe and reproducible platform to develop an efficacious whole-cell malaria vaccine that prevents infection at the preerythrocytic stage.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Proteomic Profiling of Plasmodium Sporozoite Maturation Identifies New Proteins Essential for Parasite Development and InfectivityPLoS Pathogens, 2008
- Gene Disruption of Plasmodium falciparum p52 Results in Attenuation of Malaria Liver Stage Development in Cultured Primary Human HepatocytesPLOS ONE, 2008
- Malaria: progress, perils, and prospects for eradicationJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2008
- Wheat Germ Cell-Free System-Based Production of Malaria Proteins for Discovery of Novel Vaccine CandidatesInfection and Immunity, 2008
- Genetically AttenuatedPlasmodium bergheiLiver Stages Induce Sterile Protracted Protection That Is Mediated by Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I–Dependent Interferon‐γ–Producing CD8+T CellsThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2007
- Plasmodium yoelii Sporozoites with Simultaneous Deletion of P52 and P36 Are Completely Attenuated and Confer Sterile Immunity against InfectionInfection and Immunity, 2007
- Genetically Attenuated Plasmodium berghei Liver Stages Persist and Elicit Sterile Protection Primarily via CD8 T CellsThe American Journal of Pathology, 2007
- The global distribution of clinical episodes of Plasmodium falciparum malariaNature, 2005
- Malaria Sporozoites Release Circumsporozoite Protein from Their Apical End and Translocate It along Their SurfaceThe Journal of Protozoology, 1991
- Circumsporozoite proteins of human malaria parasites Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1982