Evaluation of Recombinant Chitinase and SXP1 Antigens as Antimicrofilarial Vaccines

Prior studies indicate that a microfilarial stage-specific chitinase is a possible candidate antigen for a transmission-blocking vaccine against Brugian filariasis. The antigen is a functional enzyme that progressively appears as microfilariae mature and become able to infect and develop in a suscep...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 1997-04, Vol.56 (4), p.474-481
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Shi Hai, Zheng, Hui Jun, Dissanayake, Sen, Cheng, Wen Fang, Tao, Zheng Hou, Lin, Shun Zhi, Piessens, Willy F
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container_end_page 481
container_issue 4
container_start_page 474
container_title The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
container_volume 56
creator Wang, Shi Hai
Zheng, Hui Jun
Dissanayake, Sen
Cheng, Wen Fang
Tao, Zheng Hou
Lin, Shun Zhi
Piessens, Willy F
description Prior studies indicate that a microfilarial stage-specific chitinase is a possible candidate antigen for a transmission-blocking vaccine against Brugian filariasis. The antigen is a functional enzyme that progressively appears as microfilariae mature and become able to infect and develop in a susceptible mosquito vector. It is recognized by a monoclonal antibody that reduces microfilaremia in infected animals and by a subset of sera from infected persons who remain amicrofilaremic. Immunization of jirds with recombinant chitinase induced partial protection against microfilaremia resulting from subsequent infection with Brugia malayi, but did not reduce adult worm burdens. Vaccination was much less effective when administered during the prepatent stage of infection and was ineffective when given to microfilaremic jirds. The protective epitope appears to be located close to the carboxy terminus of the chitinase molecule. Immunization of jirds with SXP1, an antigen present in multiple worm stages, also reduced microfilaremia and, in some experiments, adult worm burdens, but hyperimmunization with a recombinant filarial myosin was not protective. These observations indicate that the relative timing of immunization and infection is an important factor in the efficacy of antimicrofilarial vaccines.
doi_str_mv 10.4269/ajtmh.1997.56.474
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subjects Animals
Antigens, Helminth - genetics
Antigens, Helminth - immunology
Brugia malayi
Brugia malayi - enzymology
Brugia malayi - genetics
Brugia malayi - immunology
Chitinases - genetics
Chitinases - immunology
Epitope Mapping
Female
Filariasis - prevention & control
Gerbillinae
Male
Microfilariae - enzymology
Microfilariae - genetics
Microfilariae - immunology
Molecular Sequence Data
Parasitemia - prevention & control
Recombinant Proteins - genetics
Recombinant Proteins - immunology
Time Factors
Vaccination
Vaccines, Synthetic
title Evaluation of Recombinant Chitinase and SXP1 Antigens as Antimicrofilarial Vaccines
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