Plasmodium vivaxspleen-dependent genes encode antigens associated with cytoadhesion and clinical protection

Author:

Fernandez-Becerra CarmenORCID,Bernabeu Maria,Castellanos AngélicaORCID,Correa Bruna R.,Obadia Thomas,Ramirez Miriam,Rui Edmilson,Hentzschel Franziska,López-Montañés Maria,Ayllon-Hermida Alberto,Martin-Jaular LorenaORCID,Elizalde-Torrent Aleix,Siba Peter,Vêncio Ricardo Z.,Arevalo-Herrera MyriamORCID,Herrera Sócrates,Alonso Pedro L.,Mueller Ivo,del Portillo Hernando A.ORCID

Abstract

Plasmodium vivax, the most widely distributed human malaria parasite, causes severe clinical syndromes despite low peripheral blood parasitemia. This conundrum is further complicated as cytoadherence in the microvasculature is still a matter of investigations. Previous reports inPlasmodium knowlesi, another parasite species shown to infect humans, demonstrated that variant genes involved in cytoadherence were dependent on the spleen for their expression. Hence, using a global transcriptional analysis of parasites obtained from spleen-intact and splenectomized monkeys, we identified 67P. vivaxgenes whose expression was spleen dependent. To determine their role in cytoadherence, twoPlasmodium falciparumtransgenic lines expressing two variant proteins pertaining to VIR and Pv-FAM-D multigene families were used. Cytoadherence assays demonstrated specific binding to human spleen but not lung fibroblasts of the transgenic line expressing the VIR14 protein. To gain more insights, we expressed fiveP. vivaxspleen-dependent genes as recombinant proteins, including members of three different multigene families (VIR, Pv-FAM-A, Pv-FAM-D), one membrane transporter (SECY), and one hypothetical protein (HYP1), and determined their immunogenicity and association with clinical protection in a prospective study of 383 children in Papua New Guinea. Results demonstrated that spleen-dependent antigens are immunogenic in natural infections and that antibodies to HYP1 are associated with clinical protection. These results suggest that the spleen plays a major role in expression of parasite proteins involved in cytoadherence and can reveal antigens associated with clinical protection, thus prompting a paradigm shift inP. vivaxbiology toward deeper studies of the spleen during infections.

Funder

Fundación Cellex

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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