1. A Mosquito AgTRIO Monoclonal Antibody Reduces Early Plasmodium Infection of Mice.
- Author
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Chuang YM, Tang XD, and Fikrig E
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Immunization, Passive, Immunoglobulin Fc Fragments, Insect Proteins chemistry, Insect Proteins immunology, Malaria parasitology, Mice, Plasmodium berghei immunology, Protein Binding immunology, Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs immunology, Anopheles immunology, Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Culicidae immunology, Malaria immunology, Malaria prevention & control
- Abstract
Malaria begins when an infected mosquito injects saliva containing Plasmodium sporozoites into the skin of a vertebrate host. Passive immunization of mice with antiserum against the Anopheles gambiae mosquito saliva protein TRIO (AgTRIO) offers significant protection against Plasmodium infection of mice. Furthermore, passive transfer of both AgTRIO antiserum and an anti-circumsporozoite protein monoclonal antibody provides synergistic protection. In this study, we generated monoclonal antibodies against AgTRIO to delineate the regions of AgTRIO associated with protective immunity. Monoclonal antibody 13F-1 markedly reduced Plasmodium infection in mice and recognized a region (VDDLMAKFN) in the carboxyl terminus of AgTRIO. 13F-1 is an IgG2a isotype monoclonal antibody, and the Fc region is required for protection. These data will aid in the generation of future malaria vaccines that may include both pathogen and vector antigens.
- Published
- 2022
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