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Humoral immune responses to Plasmodium falciparum among HIV-1-infected Kenyan adults

Authors :
Al Jasinskas
John N. Waitumbi
Philip L. Felgner
Grace John-Stewart
Francis Kimani
Adam Vigil
Mina Kalantari-Dehaghi
Judd L. Walson
Phelgona Otieno
Beth Mutai
Daniel Mutua
Obinna N. Nnedu
Michael P. O'Leary
Xiaowu Liang
David Camerini
Rie Nakajima-Sasaki
Source :
Proteomics. Clinical applications. 5(11-12)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Humoral immune responses play a pivotal role in naturally acquired immunity to malaria. Understanding which humoral responses are impaired among individuals at higher risk for malaria may improve our understanding of malaria immune control and contribute to vaccine development.We compared humoral responses with 483 Plasmodium falciparum antigens between adults in, Kisumu (high, year-long malaria transmission leading to partial immunity), and adults in Kisii (low, seasonal malaria transmission). Then within each site, we compared malaria-specific humoral responses between those at higher risk for malaria (CD4(+) ≤500) and those at lower risk for malaria (CD4(+)500). A protein microarray chip containing 483 P. falciparum antigens and 71 HIV antigens was used. Benjamini-Hochberg adjustments were made to control for multiple comparisons.Fifty-seven antigens including CSP, MSP1, LSA1 and AMA1 were identified as significantly more reactive in Kisumu than in Kisii. Ten of these antigens had been identified as protective in an earlier study. CD4(+) T-cell count did not significantly impact humoral responses.Protein microarrays are a useful method to screen multiple humoral responses simultaneously. This study provides useful clues for potential vaccine candidates. Modest decreases in CD4 counts may not significantly impact malaria-specific humoral immunity.

Details

ISSN :
18628354
Volume :
5
Issue :
11-12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proteomics. Clinical applications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....acd0acaf941dafec417c845a46d96c1d