Acquired Immune Responses to Plasmodium falciparum Merozoite Surface Protein-1 in the Human Fetus

Infants born in areas of stable malaria transmission are relatively protected against severe morbidity and high density Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage infection. This protection may involve prenatal sensitization and immunologic reactivity to malaria surface ligands that participate in invasion o...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of immunology (1950) 2002-01, Vol.168 (1), p.356-364
Hauptverfasser: King, Christopher L, Malhotra, Indu, Wamachi, Alex, Kioko, John, Mungai, Peter, Wahab, Sherif Abdel, Koech, Davy, Zimmerman, Peter, Ouma, John, Kazura, James W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Infants born in areas of stable malaria transmission are relatively protected against severe morbidity and high density Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage infection. This protection may involve prenatal sensitization and immunologic reactivity to malaria surface ligands that participate in invasion of red cells. We examined cord blood T and B cell immunity to P. falciparum merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1) in infants born in an area of stable malaria transmission in Kenya. T cell cytokine responses to the C-terminal 19-kDa fragment of MSP-1 (MSP-1(19)) were detected in 24 of 92 (26%) newborns (4-192 IFN-gamma and 3-88 IL-4-secreting cells per 10(6)/cord blood lymphocytes). Peptide epitopes in the N-terminal block 3 region of MSP-1 also drove IFN-gamma and/or IL-13 production. There was no evidence of prenatal T cell sensitization to liver-stage Ag-1. A total of 5 of 86 (6%) newborns had cord blood anti-MSP-1(19) IgM Abs, an Ig isotype that does not cross the placenta and is therefore of fetal origin. The frequency of neonatal B cell sensitization was higher than that indicated by serology alone, as 5 of 27 (18%) cord blood samples contained B cells that produced IgG when stimulated with MSP-1(19) in vitro. Neonatal B cell IgG responses were restricted to the Q-KNG allele of MSP-1(19), the major variant in this endemic area, whereas T cells responded to all four MSP-1(19) alleles evaluated. In utero sensitization to MSP-1 correlated with the presence of malaria parasites in cord blood (chi(2) = 20, p < 0.0001). These data indicate that prenatal sensitization to blood-stage Ags occurs in infants born in malaria endemic areas.
ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.168.1.356