Parasitology Unit, Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin, Germany.
Int J Parasitol. 2012 May 15;42(6):535-48. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2012.03.011. Epub 2012 Apr 26.
Malaria is a vector-borne infectious disease caused by infection with eukaryotic pathogens termed Plasmodium. Epidemiological hallmarks of Plasmodium falciparum malaria are continuous re-infections, over which time the human host may experience several clinical malaria episodes, slow acquisition of partial protection against infection, and its partial decay upon migration away from endemic regions. To overcome the exposure-dependence of naturally acquired immunity and rapidly elicit robust long-term protection are ultimate goals of malaria vaccine development. However, cellular and molecular correlates of naturally acquired immunity against either parasite infection or malarial disease remain elusive. Sero-epidemiological studies consistently suggest that acquired immunity is primarily directed against the asexual blood stages. Here, we review available data on the relationship between immune responses against the Anopheles mosquito-transmitted sporozoite and exo-erythrocytic liver stages and the incidence of malaria. We discuss current limitations and research opportunities, including the identification of additional sporozoite antigens and the use of systematic immune profiling and functional studies in longitudinal cohorts to look for pre-erythrocytic signatures of naturally acquired immunity.
疟疾是一种由被称为疟原虫的真核病原体感染引起的经媒介传播的传染病。恶性疟原虫疟疾的流行病学特征是持续再感染,在此期间,人类宿主可能会经历多次临床疟疾发作,对感染的部分保护作用缓慢获得,并在离开流行地区时部分衰减。克服自然获得性免疫的暴露依赖性并迅速引发强大的长期保护作用是疟疾疫苗开发的最终目标。然而,针对寄生虫感染或疟疾疾病的自然获得性免疫的细胞和分子相关性仍然难以捉摸。血清流行病学研究一致表明,获得性免疫主要针对无性血期。在这里,我们回顾了关于针对疟蚊传播的子孢子和外红细胞期的免疫反应与疟疾发病率之间关系的现有数据。我们讨论了当前的局限性和研究机会,包括鉴定额外的子孢子抗原以及在纵向队列中使用系统免疫分析和功能研究来寻找自然获得性免疫的红细胞前特征。