Bull P C, Lowe B S, Kortok M, Molyneux C S, Newbold C I, Marsh K
Kenya Medical Research Institute CRC, Kilifi Unit.
Nat Med. 1998 Mar;4(3):358-60. doi: 10.1038/nm0398-358.
The feasibility of a malaria vaccine is supported by the fact that children in endemic areas develop naturally acquired immunity to disease. Development of disease immunity is characterized by a decrease in the frequency and severity of disease episodes over several years despite almost continuous infection, suggesting that immunity may develop through the acquisition of a repertoire of specific, protective antibodies directed against polymorphic target antigens. Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) is a potentially important family of target antigens, because these proteins are inserted into the red cell surface and are prominently exposed and because they are highly polymorphic and undergo clonal antigenic variation, a mechanism of immune evasion maintained by a large family of var genes. In a large prospective study of Kenyan children, we have used the fact that anti-PfEMP1 antibodies agglutinate infected erythrocytes in a variant-specific manner, to show that the PfEMP1 variants expressed during episodes of clinical malaria were less likely to be recognized by the corresponding child's own preexisting antibody response than by that of children of the same age from the same community. In contrast, a heterologous parasite isolate was just as likely to be recognized. The apparent selective pressure exerted by established anti-PfEMP1 antibodies on infecting parasites supports the idea that such responses provide variant-specific protection against disease.
流行地区的儿童会自然获得对该疾病的免疫力。疾病免疫力的发展特征是,尽管几乎持续感染,但在数年中疾病发作的频率和严重程度会降低,这表明免疫力可能通过获得针对多态性靶抗原的一系列特异性保护性抗体而发展。恶性疟原虫红细胞膜蛋白1(PfEMP1)是一个潜在的重要靶抗原家族,因为这些蛋白质插入红细胞表面并显著暴露,还因为它们高度多态且会发生克隆性抗原变异,这是由一大类var基因维持的一种免疫逃避机制。在一项针对肯尼亚儿童的大型前瞻性研究中,我们利用抗PfEMP1抗体以变异体特异性方式凝集感染红细胞这一事实,来表明临床疟疾发作期间表达的PfEMP1变异体,与来自同一社区的同龄儿童相比,被相应儿童自身先前存在的抗体反应识别的可能性更小。相比之下,一种异源寄生虫分离株被识别的可能性相同。已有的抗PfEMP1抗体对感染寄生虫施加的明显选择压力支持了这样一种观点,即此类反应提供针对疾病的变异体特异性保护。