Naturally acquired antibodies to polymorphic and conserved epitopes of Plasmodium falciparum merozoite surface protein 3
Date
2007Author
OSIER, F. H. A.
POLLEY, S. D.
Mwangi, Tabitha
LOWE, B.
CONWAY, D. J.
MARSH, K.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Many studies on the role of merozoite surface protein 3
(MSP3) in immunity against malaria have focused on a
conserved section of MSP3. New evidence suggests that polymorphic
sequences within MSP3 are under immune selection.
We report a detailed analysis of naturally-acquired antibodies
to allele-specific and conserved parts of MSP3 in a Kenyan
cohort. Indirect and competition ELISA to heterologous
recombinant MSP3 proteins were used for antibody assays, and
parasites were genotyped for msp3 alleles. Antibody reactivity
to allele-specific and conserved epitopes of MSP3 was heterogenous
between individuals. Overall, the prevalence of allelespecific
antibody reactivity was significantly higher (3D7-specific
54%, K1-specific 41%) than that to a recombinant protein
representing a conserved portion of C-terminal MSP3 (24%,
P <
0·01). The most abundant IgG subclass was IgG3, followed
by IgG1. Allele-specific reactivity to the K1-type of MSP3
was associated with a lower risk of clinical malaria episodes
during a 6-month follow-up in individuals who were parasitized
at the start of the malaria transmission season (Relative risk
0·41 with 95% confidence interval 0·20–0·81,
P =
0·011). The
potential importance of allele-specific immunity to MSP3
should be considered in addition to immunity to conserved
epitopes, in the development of an MSP3 malaria vaccine.