Differential ability of specific regions of Plasmodium falciparum sexual-stage antigen, Pfs230, to induce malaria transmission-blocking immunity

P. J. Bustamante, D. C. Woodruff, J. Oh, D. B. Keister, O. Muratova, K. C. Williamson*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

46 Scopus citations

Abstract

Antibodies raised against an Escherichia coli-produced recombinant protein encoding a 76-kDa section (region C) of malaria transmission-blocking vaccine candidate, Pfs230, have previously been shown to significantly reduce the ability of Plasmodium falciparum parasites to infect mosquitoes (71.2-89.8%). To further define the region of the Pfs230 required for transmission-blocking activity, four recombinant proteins each encoding a section of region C (Pfs230 amino acids 443-1132) were produced using the same E. coli expression system and tested for immunogenicity in mice: (i) r230/MBP.C5' encodes the first half of region C (amino acids 443-791, six cysteines); (ii) r230/MBP.CM1 encodes only cysteine motif (CM) 1 (amino acids 583-913, eight cysteines); (iii) r230/MBP.C1.6 (amino acids 453-913, eight cysteines) also includes all of CM1; and (iv) r230/MBP.C2 encodes only CM2 (amino acids 914-1268, 11 cysteines). All the recombinant proteins induced antibodies that recognized parasite-produced Pfs230, but the titre of the Pfs230 specific-antibodies generated varied, C = C1.6 = C5' > CM1 > CM2. Two recombinants, r230/MBP.C5' and r230/MBP.C1.6, induced antibody titres that were equivalent to or greater than the titre generated by r230/MBP.C. However, in contrast to r230/MBP.C, none of the recombinants induced antibodies that effectively blocked parasite infectivity to mosquitoes. This suggests that the inclusion of amino acids 914-1132 is important for the production of the transmission-blocking epitope present in region C.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)373-380
Number of pages8
JournalParasite Immunology
Volume22
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 2000
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Malaria
  • Pfs230
  • Plasmodium falciparum
  • Transmission-blocking
  • Vaccine

Cite this