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MSP-1 malaria pseudopeptide analogs: biological and immunological significance and three-dimensional structure

Authors :
José Manuel Lozano
Martha Patricia Alba
Magnolia Vanegas
Manuel E. Patarroyo
José Libardo Torres-castellanos
Yolanda Silva
Source :
Biological chemistry. 384(1)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Merozoite Surface Protein-1 (MSP-1) has been considered as a malaria vaccine candidate. It is processed during the Plasmodium falciparum invasion process of red blood cells (RBCs). A conserved MSP-1 C-terminal peptide wasidentified as a high-activity erythrocytebinding peptide (HAEBP) termed 1585. Since conserved HAEBPs are neither antigenic nor immunogenic we decided to assess the significance of a single peptide bond replacement in 1585. Thus, two pseudopeptides were obtained by introducing a Y[CH 2 -NH] reduced amide isoster into the 1585 critical binding motif. The pseudopeptides bound to different HLA-DR alleles, suggesting that backbone modifications affect MHC-II binding patterns. Pseudopeptide-antibodies inhibit in vitro parasite RBC invasion by recognizing MSP-1. Each pseudopeptide-induced antibody shows distinct recognition patterns. 1 H-NMR studies demonstrated that isoster bonds modulate the pseudopeptides' structure and thus their immunological properties, therefore representing a possible subunit malaria vaccine component.

Details

ISSN :
14316730
Volume :
384
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biological chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94076ee7c96c27e0eeeb9d983215242a