Hviid Lars
Centre for Medical Parasitology, Copenhagen University Hospital (Rigshospitalet), University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Acta Trop. 2005 Sep;95(3):270-5. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2005.06.012.
Infection by Plasmodium falciparum parasites can lead to substantial protective immunity to malaria, and available evidence suggest that acquisition of protection against some severe malaria syndromes can be fairly rapid. Although these facts have raised hopes that the development of effective vaccines against this major cause of human misery is a realistic goal, the uncertainty regarding the antigenic targets of naturally acquired protective immunity and the immunological mechanisms involved remain major vaccine development obstacles. Nevertheless, a coherent theoretical framework of how protective immunity to P. falciparum malaria is acquired following natural exposure to the parasites is beginning to emerge, not least thanks to studies that have combined clinical and epidemiological data with basic immunological research. This framework involves IgG with specificity for clonally variant antigens on the surface of the infected erythrocytes, can explain some of the difficulties in relating particular immune responses with specificity for well-defined antigenic targets to clinical protection, and suggests a radically new approach to controlling malaria-related morbidity and mortality by immunological means.
恶性疟原虫感染可导致对疟疾产生显著的保护性免疫,现有证据表明,获得针对某些严重疟疾综合征的保护作用可能相当迅速。尽管这些事实让人们燃起希望,即开发针对这一人类苦难主要根源的有效疫苗是一个现实目标,但自然获得性保护性免疫的抗原靶点以及相关免疫机制的不确定性仍是疫苗开发的主要障碍。然而,一个关于自然接触疟原虫后如何获得对恶性疟原虫疟疾的保护性免疫的连贯理论框架正开始浮现,这尤其要归功于将临床和流行病学数据与基础免疫学研究相结合的研究。该框架涉及对感染红细胞表面克隆变异抗原具有特异性的IgG,能够解释将针对明确抗原靶点具有特异性的特定免疫反应与临床保护联系起来时遇到的一些困难,并提出了一种通过免疫手段控制疟疾相关发病和死亡的全新方法。