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Mother-Newborn Pairs in Malawi Have Similar Antibody Repertoires to Diverse Malaria Antigens

Authors :
Christopher V. Plowe
Mark A. Travassos
Titus H. Divala
Jason A. Bailey
Algis Jasinskas
Jenny A. Walldorf
Jozelyn Pablo
Patricia Mawindo
Philip L. Felgner
Amed Ouattara
Matthew Adams
Sarah Boudova
Rie Nakajima
Miriam K. Laufer
Randy G. Mungwira
Edwards, Kathryn M
Source :
Clinical and vaccine immunology : CVI, vol 24, iss 10
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2017.

Abstract

Maternal antibodies may play a role in protecting newborns against malaria disease. Plasmodium falciparum parasite surface antigens are diverse, and protection from infection requires allele-specific immunity. Although malaria-specific antibodies have been shown to cross the placenta, the extent to which antibodies that respond to the full repertoire of diverse antigens are transferred from the mother to the infant has not been explored. Understanding the breadth of maternal antibody responses and to what extent these antibodies are transferred to the child can inform vaccine design and evaluation. We probed plasma from cord blood and serum from mothers at delivery using a customized protein microarray that included variants of malaria vaccine target antigens to assess the intensity and breadth of seroreactivity to three malaria vaccine candidate antigens in mother-newborn pairs in Malawi. Among the 33 paired specimens that were assessed, mothers and newborns had similar intensity and repertoire of seroreactivity. Maternal antibody levels against vaccine candidate antigens were the strongest predictors of infant antibody levels. Placental malaria did not significantly impair transplacental antibody transfer. However, mothers with placental malaria had significantly higher antibody levels against these blood-stage antigens than mothers without placental malaria. The repertoire and levels of infant antibodies against a wide range of malaria vaccine candidate antigen variants closely mirror maternal levels in breadth and magnitude regardless of evidence of placental malaria. Vaccinating mothers with an effective malaria vaccine during pregnancy may induce high and potentially protective antibody repertoires in newborns.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and vaccine immunology : CVI, vol 24, iss 10
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8c1c484c17bc5a95d91ce99dca7a4f6