Structure-guided insights into potential function of novel genetic variants in the malaria vaccine candidate PfRh5

Author:

Mangou Khadidiatou,Moore Adam J.,Thiam Laty Gaye,Ba Aboubacar,Orfanó Alessandra,Desamours Ife,Ndegwa Duncan Ndungu,Goodwin Justin,Guo Yicheng,Sheng Zizhang,Patel Saurabh D.,Diallo Fatoumata,Sene Seynabou D.,Pouye Mariama N.,Faye Awa Thioub,Thiam Alassane,Nunez Vanessa,Diagne Cheikh Tidiane,Sadio Bacary Djilocalisse,Shapiro Lawrence,Faye Ousmane,Mbengue Alassane,Bei Amy K.

Abstract

AbstractThe recent stall in the global reduction of malaria deaths has made the development of a highly effective vaccine essential. A major challenge to developing an efficacious vaccine is the extensive diversity of Plasmodium falciparum antigens. While genetic diversity plays a major role in immune evasion and is a barrier to the development of both natural and vaccine-induced protective immunity, it has been under-prioritized in the evaluation of malaria vaccine candidates. This study uses genomic approaches to evaluate genetic diversity in next generation malaria vaccine candidate PfRh5. We used targeted deep amplicon sequencing to identify non-synonymous Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) in PfRh5 (Reticulocyte-Binding Protein Homologue 5) in 189 P. falciparum positive samples from Southern Senegal and identified 74 novel SNPs. We evaluated the population prevalence of these SNPs as well as the frequency in individual samples and found that only a single SNP, C203Y, was present at every site. Many SNPs were unique to the individual sampled, with over 90% of SNPs being found in just one infected individual. In addition to population prevalence, we assessed individual level SNP frequencies which revealed that some SNPs were dominant (frequency of greater than 25% in a polygenomic sample) whereas most were rare, present at 2% or less of total reads mapped to the reference at the given position. Structural modeling uncovered 3 novel SNPs occurring under epitopes bound by inhibitory monoclonal antibodies, potentially impacting immune evasion, while other SNPs were predicted to impact PfRh5 structure or interactions with the receptor or binding partners. Our data demonstrate that PfRh5 exhibits greater genetic diversity than previously described, with the caveat that most of the uncovered SNPs are at a low overall frequency in the individual and prevalence in the population. The structural studies reveal that novel SNPs could have functional implications on PfRh5 receptor binding, complex formation, or immune evasion, supporting continued efforts to validate PfRh5 as an effective malaria vaccine target and development of a PfRh5 vaccine.

Funder

Institut Pasteur

Yale School of Public Health

Fogarty International Center

National Institutes of Health

Crick African Network Grant

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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