Alanine Mutagenesis of the Primary Antigenic Escape Residue Cluster, C1, of Apical Membrane Antigen 1
0301 basic medicine
Alanine
Blotting, Western
Protozoan Proteins
Antibodies, Protozoan
Membrane Proteins
Antigens, Protozoan
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
Cross Reactions
Polymerase Chain Reaction
3. Good health
03 medical and health sciences
Antibody Specificity
Malaria Vaccines
Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
Animals
Rabbits
Protein Structure, Quaternary
DOI:
10.1128/iai.00866-09
Publication Date:
2009-12-01T02:58:35Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACTAntibodies against apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) inhibit invasion ofPlasmodiummerozoites into red cells, and a large number of single nucleotide polymorphisms on AMA1 allow the parasite to escape inhibitory antibodies. The availability of a crystal structure makes it possible to test protein engineering strategies to develop a monovalent broadly reactive vaccine. Previously, we showed that a linear stretch of polymorphic residues (amino acids 187 to 207), localized within the C1 cluster on domain 1, conferred the highest level of escape from inhibitory antibodies, and these were termed antigenic escape residues (AER). Here we test the hypothesis that immunodampening the C1 AER will divert the immune system toward more conserved regions. We substituted seven C1 AER of the FVO strainPlasmodium falciparumAMA1 with alanine residues (ALA). The resulting ALA protein was less immunogenic than the native protein in rabbits. Anti-ALA antibodies contained a higher proportion of cross-reactive domain 2 and domain 3 antibodies and had higher avidity than anti-FVO. No overall enhancement of cross-reactive inhibitory activity was observed when anti-FVO and anti-ALA sera were compared for their ability to inhibit invasion. Alanine mutations at the C1 AER had shifted the immune response toward cross-strain-reactive epitopes that were noninhibitory, refuting the hypothesis but confirming the importance of the C1 cluster as an inhibitory epitope. We further demonstrate that naturally occurring polymorphisms that fall within the C1 cluster can predict escape from cross-strain invasion inhibition, reinforcing the importance of the C1 cluster genotype for antigenic categorization and allelic shift analyses in future phase 2b trials.
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CITATIONS (22)
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