Natural immunity to malaria preferentially targets the endothelial protein C receptor-binding regions of PfEMP1s

Author:

Tewey Madison A.1ORCID,Coulibaly Drissa2,Lawton Jonathan G.1,Stucke Emily M.1,Zhou Albert E.1,Berry Andrea A.1,Bailey Jason A.1,Pike Andrew1,Dara Antoine2,Ouattara Amed1,Lyke Kirsten E.1,Ifeonu Olukemi1,Laurens Matthew B.1ORCID,Adams Matthew1,Takala-Harrison Shannon1,Niangaly Amadou2,Kouriba Bourema2,Koné Abdoulaye K.2,Rowe J. Alexandra3,Doumbo Ogobara K.2,Patel Jigar J.4,Tan John C.4,Felgner Philip L.5,Plowe Christopher V.1,Thera Mahamadou A.2,Travassos Mark A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Malaria Research Program, Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland, USA

2. Malaria Research and Training Center, University of Sciences, Techniques and Technologies , Bamako, Mali

3. Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution, Institute of Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh, United Kingdom

4. Roche NimbleGen, Inc. , Madison, Wisconsin, USA

5. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of California , Irvine, California, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Antibody responses to variant surface antigens (VSAs) produced by the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum may contribute to age-related natural immunity to severe malaria. One VSA family, P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein-1 (PfEMP1), includes a subset of proteins that binds endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) in human hosts and potentially disrupts the regulation of inflammatory responses, which may lead to the development of severe malaria. We probed peptide microarrays containing segments spanning five PfEMP1 EPCR-binding domain variants with sera from 10 Malian adults and 10 children to determine the differences between adult and pediatric immune responses. We defined serorecognized peptides and amino acid residues as those that elicited a significantly higher antibody response than malaria-naïve controls. We aimed to identify regions consistently serorecognized among adults but not among children across PfEMP1 variants, potentially indicating regions that drive the development of immunity to severe malaria. Adult sera consistently demonstrated broader and more intense serologic responses to constitutive PfEMP1 peptides than pediatric sera, including peptides in EPCR-binding domains. Both adults and children serorecognized a significantly higher proportion of EPCR-binding peptides than peptides that do not directly participate in receptor binding, indicating a preferential development of serologic responses at functional residues. Over the course of a single malaria transmission season, pediatric serological responses increased between the start and the peak of the season, but waned as the transmission season ended. IMPORTANCE Severe malaria and death related to malaria disproportionately affect sub-Saharan children under 5 years of age, commonly manifesting as cerebral malaria and/or severe malarial anemia. In contrast, adults in malaria-endemic regions tend to experience asymptomatic or mild disease. Our findings indicate that natural immunity to malaria targets specific regions within the EPCR-binding domain, particularly peptides containing EPCR-binding residues. Epitopes containing these residues may be promising targets for vaccines or therapeutics directed against severe malaria. Our approach provides insight into the development of natural immunity to a binding target linked to severe malaria by characterizing an “adult-like” response as recognizing a proportion of epitopes within the PfEMP1 protein, particularly regions that mediate EPCR binding. This “adult-like” response likely requires multiple years of malaria exposure, as increases in pediatric serologic response over a single malaria transmission season do not appear significant.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Burroughs Wellcome Fund/American Society of Tropcal Medicine Hygiene

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

University of Maryland Scholars Program

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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