Back to Search Start Over

Controlled human malaria infection with a clone of Plasmodium vivax with high-quality genome assembly.

Authors :
Minassian AM
Themistocleous Y
Silk SE
Barrett JR
Kemp A
Quinkert D
Nielsen CM
Edwards NJ
Rawlinson TA
Ramos Lopez F
Roobsoong W
Ellis KJ
Cho JS
Aunin E
Otto TD
Reid AJ
Bach FA
Labbé GM
Poulton ID
Marini A
Zaric M
Mulatier M
Lopez Ramon R
Baker M
Mitton CH
Sousa JC
Rachaphaew N
Kumpitak C
Maneechai N
Suansomjit C
Piteekan T
Hou MM
Khozoee B
McHugh K
Roberts DJ
Lawrie AM
Blagborough AM
Nugent FL
Taylor IJ
Johnson KJ
Spence PJ
Sattabongkot J
Biswas S
Rayner JC
Draper SJ
Source :
JCI insight [JCI Insight] 2021 Dec 08; Vol. 6 (23). Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Dec 08.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) provides a highly informative means to investigate host-pathogen interactions and enable in vivo proof-of-concept efficacy testing of new drugs and vaccines. However, unlike Plasmodium falciparum, well-characterized P. vivax parasites that are safe and suitable for use in modern CHMI models are limited. Here, 2 healthy malaria-naive United Kingdom adults with universal donor blood group were safely infected with a clone of P. vivax from Thailand by mosquito-bite CHMI. Parasitemia developed in both volunteers, and prior to treatment, each volunteer donated blood to produce a cryopreserved stabilate of infected RBCs. Following stringent safety screening, the parasite stabilate from one of these donors (PvW1) was thawed and used to inoculate 6 healthy malaria-naive United Kingdom adults by blood-stage CHMI, at 3 different dilutions. Parasitemia developed in all volunteers, who were then successfully drug treated. PvW1 parasite DNA was isolated and sequenced to produce a high-quality genome assembly by using a hybrid assembly method. We analyzed leading vaccine candidate antigens and multigene families, including the vivax interspersed repeat (VIR) genes, of which we identified 1145 in the PvW1 genome. Our genomic analysis will guide future assessment of candidate vaccines and drugs, as well as experimental medicine studies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2379-3708
Volume :
6
Issue :
23
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JCI insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34609964
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.152465